All posts tagged ‘CNet’
by Leslie Katz, Associate Editor, CNET News.com
You thought it was bad getting tossed aside for another woman? Try getting rejected for an MP3 player.
A new dating series based on the notion that “boys love their toys” will pit girls against gadgets in an attempt to answer that age-old question: hottie or hot HDTV? In a twist on the reality TV staple “For Love or Money,” Playboy TV’s “Gadget or the Girl” will make contestants choose between a weekend getaway with a girl of their choice or a surprise high-tech toy.
The gear will range from a 60-inch plasma TV to an arcade game machine, but the guy won’t know what his prize is until he opts for either the gadget or the girl.
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Posted at 12:00 AM PT
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Tagged: CNet, Crave, For Love or Money, Gadget or the Girl, HDTV, Leslie Katz, MP3 player, News.com, Playboy TV, Voices, arcade game machine, high-tech toy, plasma TV, weekend getaway | permalink
by Elinor Mills, Senior Writer, CNET News.com
The security issues we face today in cyberspace are the same ones the country faced during the American Civil War when Abe Lincoln was relying on telegraph transmissions to help keep the country united, a top U.S. cybersecurity official said in a keynote speech at the Black Hat security conference here Thursday.
Lincoln was obsessed with reading telegrams that delivered updates from the battlefield, using them to learn about the military strategies and to offer feedback, said Rod Beckstrom, director of the National Cyber Security Center in the Department of Homeland Security.
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Posted at 12:03 AM PT
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Tagged: Abe Lincoln, American Civil War, Black Hat, CNet, Department of Homeland Security, Elinor Mills, National Cyber Security Center, News.com, Rod Beckstrom, Voices, battlefield, cybersecurity, keynote, military strategy, security, telegrams | permalink
by Caroline McCarthy, Editor, The Social, CNET
Recent rumors of Intel employees signing up for Facebook accounts en masse might not have been totally unfounded: Facebook has chosen to use Intel’s Xeon 5400 processor-based servers to deal with its hardware and software demands. Additionally, the two companies have signed an agreement so that Intel can continue to assess how Facebook can stay stable and improve performance.
Facebook will have “thousands” of Xeon servers, a release said.
It’s not an earth-shattering announcement by any means, but Intel’s pretty psyched. “Intel is excited to engage with Facebook as they are a dynamic force in the evolution of the Internet,” Kirk Skaugen, vice president and general manager of Intel’s Server Platforms Group, said in Thursday’s release.
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by Elinor Mills, Senior Writer, CNET News.com
Kevin Mitnick knows that the weakest link in any security system is the person holding the information.
As a young fugitive hacker, he went to jail for breaking into computer networks, more often by using his cunning and persuasion than his tech skills. He was an early master of the science of social engineering–manipulating people into doing what you want, such as giving out passwords and other information that unlocks sensitive information on networks.
Mitnick and a panel of other hackers discussed their social engineering pranks and gave live demonstrations at the live HOPE (Hackers on Planet Earth) conference late on Saturday.
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by Stefanie Olsen, Blogger, CNET News.com
Just three years ago, she was one of “three chicks with credit cards” trying to form a consortium of female bloggers.
Now, former CNN journalist Lisa Stone is championing a network of 2,200 blogs in a fresh strategic partnership with iVillage, taking on a new $5 million investment from iVillage-parent NBC Universal, and playing host to as many as eight blog-publishing conferences this year around the country. This Friday, the BlogHer conference in San Francisco is expected to attract as many as 3,000 bloggers, some of them mothers driving across the country via caravan while blogging about their trip. (Stone co-founded BlogHer in February 2005 with Elisa Camahort Page and Jory Des Jardins.)
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Posted at 12:04 AM PT
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Tagged: BlogHer, CNN, CNet, Elisa Camahort Page, Jory Des Jardins, Lisa Stone, NBC Universal, News.com, Stefanie Olsen, Voices, iVillage | permalink
by Dan Ackerman, Blogger, Crave, CNet
This week brings us the annual Electronic Entertainment Expo–the video game trade show better known as E3. This is E3’s 14th year, and my 10th time attending the show. But despite booming game sales and a firm foothold in the mainstream pop culture marketplace, the future of this gaming event is in jeopardy.
After years of big-budget extravagance for an audience of 60,000-plus visitors at the Los Angeles Convention Center, the game companies that form the backbone of the show felt their budgets were spiraling out of control, and even the large amount of media attention they got from E3 wasn’t worth the millions they put into building massive booths and displays.
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by Dan Farber, Editor in Chief, CNET News.com
Lately the echo chamber of the blogosphere inhabited by the Gillmor Gang (of which I am a member) has been caught in a loop of Twitter-FriendFeed convulsions.
Steve Gillmor believes that Twitter is the communications medium of the future. Send out a message to your followers and track (when the feature is enabled) the loosely coupled conversation as it wafts deeper into the cloud. FriendFeed, on the other hand, aggregates feeds from Twitter and many other sources, creating an index of the content (gestures in Gillmorspeak) an individual chooses to share with followers.
Twitter’s friendly API allows applications to be built on top of it (when the site is up), letting FriendFeed and other services tap into the Twitter stream. In addition, FriendFeed allows users to comment on the contents of the aggregated feeds and has “rooms” for discussions among a group of people.
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by Michelle Meyers, Blogger, Webware
Perhaps you heard Wednesday’s news about the price of crude oil once again reaching all-time highs, and, like me, you’re wondering how that’s going to affect gas prices at the pump as you fill up for your Memorial Day weekend trip.
Rest assured, you’ve got the likes of Milt Krantz on your side.
Krantz, 71, a retired social worker from San Jose, Calif., is also a designated gas-price spotter for GasBuddy.com, one of a handful of increasingly busy sites for finding cheap gas in your vicinity.
“It’s a little something I can do about the price of gas,” said Krantz, adding that the payoff for his efforts is the feeling that consumers are working together to make a difference. “We’re in it together.”
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by Caroline McCarthy, Editor, The Social, CNET
Social network Facebook announced Friday the debut of Facebook Connect, a new technology for members to connect their profile data and authentication credentials to external Web sites. It makes the company the latest major Web site to embrace the concept of data portability.
The formal announcement was made through a post on Facebook’s developer blog by senior platform manager Dave Morin, who has been one of the company’s most visible evangelists in the developer community over the past year. Facebook Connect will launch within the next few weeks.
Through Facebook Connect, members will be able to use their Facebook identities across the Web–profile photos, names, photos, friends, groups, events and other information. Facebook profile content, for example, could appear on other social sites, and Facebook event listings could theoretically connect with external event and invitation services.
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by Dawn Kawamoto, Blogger, NewsBlog, CNET
Now that Microsoft has withdrawn its unsolicited buyout bid, Yahoo investors who are outraged and seeking to extract some pain may gear up to engage in several actions, ranging from gunning for a board seat to voting “against” re-electing the company’s slate, say proxy solicitors and M&A attorneys.
Eric Jackson, a Yahoo shareholder activist, falls into both camps. On Sunday, Jackson said he’s planning to launch a “withhold vote” campaign and hopes to run for a board seat when Yahoo holds its next annual shareholders meeting.
“I’m definitely interested in throwing my hat in the ring, if it’s allowable, and plan to talk to other shareholders,” said Jackson, founder of hedge fund Ironfire Capital. “And whether it’s me or other people who get elected, that’s fine. Yahoo’s current board definitely needs new blood.”
Yahoo, which has yet to set a date for its next annual shareholders meeting, has all 10 board of director seats up for re-election to a one-year term.
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by Ina Fried, Blogger, Beyond Binary
Microsoft says its offer for Yahoo is off the table, but could this be just a negotiating ploy?
It’s a natural question to ask. I mean, if Microsoft has had the hots for Yahoo for two years, can it really be so sure that it is no longer interested?
My take is that Microsoft has ruled out two options, but that one possibility for Yahoo remains out there.
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by Charles Cooper, Blogger, Coop's Corner, CNET
Barring a come-to-Jesus moment by both sides, “MicroHoo” is dead and buried. So who won and who lost? Months from now, we’ll have a clear idea. In the meantime, here are my back-of-the-envelope picks.
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by Charles Cooper, Executive Editor of Commentary, CNET News.com
When Twitter suffered a brownout last weekend, the “twitterati” had a collective conniption. I suppose the good news for co-founders Evan Williams and Biz Stone is that the bad news kicked up such a storm.
Lots of people are so addicted to Twitter that the intermittent problems wreaked havoc with their daily routine.
Lead architect Blaine Cook and VP of engineering and operations Lee Mighdoll are now gone. And it’s up to management to come up with a plan. But this isn’t the first time a popular online communication service found itself a target of criticism. In August 1996, America Online got in even bigger trouble after going dark for 19 hours.
How big a deal was it? Consider this: AOL’s outage was the lead news item on the evening news programs for ABC, NBC and CBS. If you thought the grumbling about Twitter was bad, remember that AOL back then had more than 5 million subscribers and they were not a happy lot.
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by Saul Hansell, Blogger, Bits, The New York Times
Can Yahoo win by building a coalition of losers?
BoomTown reports this morning that CNET is going to announce an expanded relationship with Yahoo this afternoon. In once sense that is a yawner. Those two have hooked up and broken up so many times over the last decade that they are some sort of dysfunctional couple who can neither commit nor leave each other.
But depending on the details, there may be a clue that Yahoo’s current strategy may be getting a tad bit of traction. As I wrote after Yahoo’s earnings call, the company seems to be trying to build its ad network among the mainstream publishers who feel most threatened by the rise of Google.
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by Charles Cooper, Blogger, Coop's Corner, CNET
After the derision that greeted the New York Times’s blogging-will-kill-you story on Sunday, I’m probably not going to do much for the reputation of the mainstream media with hard-core bloggers. So it goes.
Out of curiosity, I drew up a list of 55 technology journalists to find out how many use Twitter, arguably one of the most important social-media technologies on the scene. I included names of some online reporters–including colleagues from CNET as well as TechCrunch–but in the main, the list is comprised of people employed by A-list newspapers and periodicals.
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