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added: Thu, 06th April 2006 | 600 views | 1x in favourites
feed url: http://arstechnica.com/index.ars/rss
This week in top Microsoft news on Ars, we cover IE8, Vista, Windows Search 4.0, trueSpace 7.6, WorldWide Telescope, Windows Home Server, Outlook Connector, and Zune. Details on what exactly happened with all these products inside.
Microexplosions, better flat panel displays, and how the brain manages to learn not to be afraid are some of the highlights of last week's science coverage. Enjoy a quick recap, in case you missed any of it.
Nintendo reels from a poor press conference at E3, Sony's Killzone 2 delights, and more girls are gaming than ever in gaming this week.
An upcoming product transition, more Apple clones, iPhone SDK and security, a Mac Pro supercomputing cluster, and a chat with Fake Steve Jobs are some of the highlights from the past week's Apple news.
Out frolicking under the daystar instead of sitting in front of the PC this week? No problem—Ars recaps 10 of the most interesting and important stories from the past week.
A new hack designed to exploit a weakness in the DNS protocol is out, just days after information on the exploit was accidentally posted online. A patch for the issue was released almost two weeks ago, but a significant number of servers are still vulnerable.
Ars summarizes this week in storage, including cloud storage news and hardware launches from WD, LG, Texas Memory, IBM, and Sun.
The Comcast P2P saga has come to its final chapter as a majority of FCC commissioners today voted to sanction the company. The FCC's Internet Policy Statement now sports some unexpectedly sharp teeth.
A bill introduced Thursday by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) would increase penalties for counterfeiting, empower federal prosecutors to bring civil suits against copyright infringers, create a federal copyright czar to coordinate IP enforcement, and provide for the seizure of property used to violate copyrights and trademarks.
Amidst the current global financial crisis, one corner of the technology industry is not only staying afloat, but thriving. Strangely enough, it's not a new technology, but an old one.
All's fair in social networking and addictive casual gaming—until you rip off a copyrighted game, of course. Hasbro Inc. is suing the creators of a popular Facebook game called Scrabulous, which looks and plays remarkably like one of its own copyrighted creations.
AT&T; says that the FCC needs to take a closer look at New Clearwire. Any company with "financial backing from Google, Intel, and three of the nation's largest cable television companies" needs far more scrutiny—especially when that company is going to beat AT&T; to market with 4G wireless broadband by a couple of years.
The Apache Software Foundation has announced that Microsoft will sponsor the project and will help to fund development. The move could bring about greater interoperability between Microsoft technologies and the Apache ecosystem.
Commercials in streaming TV and movies may be considered reasonable by a large majority of Internet users in the US, but the same doesn't apply to user-generated content. According to new data from Ipsos MediaCT, sites like YouTube will have to "carefully consider" ad-subsidized models since the general audience isn't used to seeing ads in stuff they created and uploaded themselves.
The Software and Information Industry Association has been going after individual sellers of counterfeit software on eBay, but are now considering dragging the online auctioneer itself in front of the courts or Congress.
A new report from McAfee suggests small and medium-size businesses neglect IT security because they think they're too small to be viable targets for cybercrooks. They're wrong.
Researchers find that malware attacks have a clustering that mimics the pattern of links among web pages that's used by search algorithms. Using firewall logs, the researchers crafted a predictive blacklist that's tailored to specific servers.
At the OSCON convention in Portland, Symbian vice president of strategy John Forsyth discussed plans for opening the Symbian mobile platform.
Yahoo has leveraged its acquisition of online collaboration suite Zimbra and introduced Yahoo Zimbra Desktop, an offline client for its services that brings IMAP to Yahoo e-mail. The suite also shows good potential for being an offline Yahoo PIM client, so we took a copy for a spin.
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