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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 7:59pm CET by Digg
Last month DeviceMAG told you about the new Facebook Timeline release which is rolling out now. Just when you are starting to be surprised on a daily...
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 7:25pm CET by Digg
"U.S. Congress appears likely to move forward with SOPA and PIPA, despite widespread opposition, IDGNS reports. The U.S. Senate is expected to begin floor debate on PIPA shortly after senators return to D.C. on Jan. 23, and supporters appear to have the votes to override a threatened f...
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 7:09pm CET by Digg
Everyone who has spent some time in front of a television lately cannot have missed the unlimited data commercials from Sprint. They advertise no usage caps and no data throttling.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 6:48pm CET by Digg
Just as the Japanese, Spanish and French languages are uniquely different, programming languages also have their variations, some more popular and easier to use than others. With the recent introduction of some new ones, there is a ‘war’ of modern day languages.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 4:12pm CET by Digg
Imagine this: an onscreen recovery application saves your day when you lose your password, without the need of a brain racking. The Apple Blog has uncovered a patent application detailed by Apple for allowing your power adapter to become a security key for your password recovery process.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 3:29pm CET by Digg
Look back at any period of rapid technological progress and you’ll find two groups of individuals: Pioneers tirelessly charting new territory for the benefit of the species and members of the old order standing against the tide to fight back the phantom of their own perceived obsolescence. The debate over the Stop Online Piracy Act boils down to exactly this — a desperate last-ditch effort by the reigning Hollywood and recording industry elite to preserve their crumbling empires, no matter the cost free speech, innovation and security.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 3:23pm CET by Digg
Google honors Charles Addams with a "horror" doodle. Charles Addams was an American cartoonist. He was known for his black humor and macabre characters.
IT’S CREEPY and it’s kooky
Mysterious and spooky
It’s altogether ooky
The Addams annivers’ry ...
To celebrate the centennial of the late, great cartoonist’s birth, Google today features a deft ghoulish “Doodle” in honor of Charles Addams, the longtime New Yorker magazine contributor who was a master of the macabre and a brilliant wit of the weird.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 2:50pm CET by Digg
A recent study finds that the top 10% of mobile users are using up a whopping 90% of wireless bandwidth.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 1:34pm CET by Digg
The brand synonymous with cost-effective HDTVs is jumping into the PC making game with five new desktop and notebook products.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 12:26pm CET by Digg
Here we go CES, here we go — the annual tech-letting is nearly upon us, and with it, a deluge of rumors and PR-led ballyhoo. Let's take a look at what not to expect from next week's Vegas-based tech spectacular.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 11:39am CET by Digg
There has been anecdotal evidence that Apple’s iPhone 4S was responsible for increased data bills. Arieso, a mobile network software and analysis company did a study to see if this was really true.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 10:32am CET by Digg
Microsoft and Sony are expected to launch their new games consoles this summer, according to reports.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 5:45am CET by Digg
Members of Congress may be on vacation, but that hasn't calmed critics who say an effort to stamp out online piracy would create an unprecedented threat to free speech on the Internet.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 5:43am CET by Digg
Was last year's CES just smoke and mirrors, or did the companies that promised their gadgetry deliver? Follow us through as we warp back to last January.
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 1:53am CET by Digg
In a post on pastebin (which has been removed, though it is cached here), a hacker group called the Lords of Dharmaraja claimed that it hacked an Indian Military Intelligence server and snagged source codes from a dozen different companies, most notably (apparently) the source code to Symantec’s Norton Antivirus. The group posted a file...
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Posted: January 7th, 2012, 12:52am CET by Digg
We look at the effect of memory bandwidth and clock speed on gaming performance.