Ubuntu 10.10 beta arrives with new netbook UI

Canonical has announced the availability of the Ubuntu 10.10 beta release. The new version of the popular Linux distribution, codenamed Maverick Meerkat, is scheduled for final release in October. It brings some noteworthy user interface improvements and updated software.

The beta ships with GNOME 2.31, which introduces support for the new dconf configuration storage system. Ubuntu’s standard F-Spot photo tool has been replaced by Shotwell, a relatively new application that is developed by nonprofit software group Yorba. Although it’s not as feature-complete as F-Spot, it’s progressing quickly and has a lot to offer.

Canonical has continued its work on panel indicators, especially the audio indicator which now has playback controls in addition to a volume management slider. This will eliminate the need for individual audio applications to have their own notification area icons.

Work has also continued on the Ubuntu Software Center, which now promotes “Featured” applications and has a section for [...] Continue Reading…

Oil sands release pollutants, contrary to government study

The extraction of heavy crude oil from oil sands in Canada is releasing as many as 13 kinds of pollutants into the surrounding air and water, according to a study published in PNAS this week. The independent report directly contradicts the results of the government-administered Regional Aquatic Monitoring Program (RAMP) that claimed neither humans nor the environment were at risk from the oil extraction.

Oil sands are swaths of ground that are laced with heavy crude oil that can be extracted and refined into fuel. Development of oil sands in Canada has been taking place since 1967, but scientists have long been uncertain of the production’s impact on the environment.

The RAMP study conducted by the government showed no significant ill effects, but another group of scientists decided to double-check their work. They took samples around an oil sands development facility in Alberta near the Athabasca River from the air and [...] Continue Reading…

Texas opens antitrust investigation of Google

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Relevant Results

September 3, 2010 1:24 PM PDT Texas opens antitrust investigation of Google by Tom Krazit Font size Print E-mail Share 10 comments

Updated 1:55 p.m. PDT with additional information and background material.
Google will face an antitrust investigation in Texas over charges that it manipulated search results, in what appears to a similar case to one pending in Europe.

Google confirmed an earlier report by Search Engine Land Friday after the close of the stock market that Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott has contacted it in connection with an “antitrust review” of Google’s business practices. Earlier this year, European regulators opened an investigation regarding claims by a [...] Continue Reading…

Reporters’ Roundtable: Checking in with Facebook and Foursquare

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Reporters’ Roundtable Podcast

September 3, 2010 3:45 PM PDT Reporters’ Roundtable: Checking in with Facebook and Foursquare by Rafe Needleman Font size Print E-mail Share Post a comment

The new hotness in tech investing today is the location check-in app. From social services like Foursquare and Gowalla to shopping-focused business like Shopkick, investors love check-in. And why not? They’re making money already, even though but a tiny fraction of the population has ever used a check-in app.

But there are issues: Privacy. Crime. And: Why have Google and Twitter not been successful in this market?
Our experts today are two writers covering this space. First, Claire Cain Miller [...] Continue Reading…

AP: Yeah, we’d better cite pajama-wearing bloggers, too

The Associated Press didn’t need any help from a bunch of unshowered bloggers pecking away at their keyboards from the basement offices in which they play “reporter,” thank you very much. Now it knows better.

At the AP’s 2009 annual meeting, Chairman Dean Singleton reminded his audience (read the speech) that the AP and its members “are the source of most of the news content being created in the world today.” The collective remains “the gold standard of newsgathering and reporting throughout the world.” And with 62 journalists killed, beaten, or detained in 2008, journalism “is not a profession for the fainthearted, or those who work in their pajamas.”
This final phrase was inaccurate—at Ars, for instance, we never break news while wearing anything less than an ascot and monocle—and surprisingly juvenile; one can feel [...] Continue Reading…

Facebook adds ‘liked’ news stories to search results

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The Digital Home

September 3, 2010 3:00 PM PDT Facebook adds ‘liked’ news stories to search results by Don Reisinger Font size Print E-mail Share Post a comment

Facebook’s search results featuring "liked" articles.
(Credit:
Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

Facebook is taking a page out of Google’s playbook.
The social network updated its search this week to include articles that a user’s friend has “liked.” So, when a person inputs a query into the Facebook search field, any article related to that query that someone in the person’s network has liked will be included. All Facebook first reported on the update.
In most cases, the search results in Facebook’s improved tool [...] Continue Reading…

Netgear offers 500Mbps powerline networking via next-gen standard

Even as the IEEE P1901 working group was set to meet this week to recommend its draft standard for broadband over powerline networks for official status, Netgear announced its line of Powerline AV 500 adapters that incorporate the HomePlug-compatible flavor of the standard. The new devices theoretically promise up to gigabit Ethernet speeds over home electrical wiring, and are the first to incorporate the newest standard.

The Powerline AV 500 comes in either standard or power pass-through versions, and are available in two-adapter “kits” to set up a source and destination point for your network. While hardcore geeks won’t settle for anything less than running Cat 6 cable all throughout the house, powerline adapters have the benefit of being able to utilize existing electrical wiring to move data from point to point, and could be convenient for homes or apartments where running new cable would be impractical, prohibitively expensive, or just not [...] Continue Reading…

Frustrated Nexus One owner sues Google over "sporadic" 3G speed

Imagine that your name is Nathan Nabors and that you live in the sunny climes of Orlando, Florida. Imagine further that, back when Google announced its own Android phone and called it the Nexus One, you realized that your Orlando-based life would only be complete with the purchase of this shiny new gadget.

So you bought one, paying the full unlocked price of $563.38 from Google’s online store. And, because you already had service with AT&T, you dropped a cool $230 to break that contract. Grand total: $793.38, and that doesn’t even include a month-to-month service plan from T-Mobile.

For $793.28, the Nexus One had better change your life—or at least get something above 2G data connectivity. Unfortunately, it didn’t do either. 3G coverage could be spotty at best, and the phone couldn’t seem to [...] Continue Reading…

iTunes 10 hands-on: snappier performance, questionable UI choices

By now, most iTunes users have already downloaded and installed iTunes 10. We’ve already given you the low-down on the biggest addition to the new version of iTunes—the Ping social network—but we also wanted to give our impressions on two “improvements” promised in the release notes: look-and-feel and performance. While we agree that iTunes is “faster and more responsive,” we’re not sold on the revised user interface.
“Enjoy performance improvements which make iTunes faster and more responsive”

Let’s face it, performance is not iTunes’ strong suit. I have a decent-sized library of some 6,700 tracks, for a total of 30GB of storage space—I can listen to music for nearly 51 days straight without ever hearing the same song twice. That is not a small music library, but it certainly doesn’t compare to many people I [...] Continue Reading…

Ivy the Kiwi on the Wii, DS is a wonderful, addictive surprise

Ivy the Kiwi was created by Yuji Naka, the co-creator of Sonic the Hedgehog. Sonic is a character that continues to enjoy a strong following, and the series gives any follow-up work a huge shadow to live under. Don’t worry, this game is up to the challenge.
Ivy is a Kiwi bird who has lost her mother and sets out to find her in a beautifully realized world of hand-drawn graphics and inviting music. Your job is to draw vines on the screen to keep her safe from the spikes and evil animals that fill the levels. The levels are short, but if you want to collect all the items you’ll have to put Ivy in harm’s way and think quickly to keep her alive—the feathers you collect are often hidden in out-of-the-way places.

[...] Continue Reading…

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