Rumored iPhone 5 Home button shown off by parts dealers

iphone_5_home_buttons

Home buttons that could be a parts for the next generation iPhone 5 have started turning up online. They are available in black and white from TVC-Mall and TrueSupplier and appear to have a different rubber gasket than the current iPhone 4S design.

It seems as if part leaks have become an honored tradition when it comes to iPhone launches. We see similar leaks when it comes to iPad and iPod touch as well. This also isn?t the first time that we?ve seen a part supplier leak parts ahead of a launch or make them publicly available for sale.

From the pictures on their respective sites in comparison to an iPhone 4S or iPhone 4 home button, the only thing that appears to have changed is the rubber gasket and mold they?re using. It doesn?t give us much of a clue as to what we can expect in the way of form factor or size change. The square portion would most likely be seated completely below the frame assembly and be an unnoticeable change to users. My guess would be that Apple is just adding a bit more stability.

iPhone 4 and 4S home buttons

As you can see, the iPhone 4S added an enclosure around the button to add more stability.

Apple did something similar when they jumped from the iPhone 4S to the iPhone 4. While the button remained the same, they added a rubber gasket around it which seems to alleviate a lot of the issues users were experiencing when it came to the iPhone 4 home button. The iPhone 4 home button is basically ?taped? on to a flimsy sensor cable that wears down over time. The iPhone 4S home button is a bit more sturdy due to the rubber gasket and somewhat improved contact.

4S and 4 home button assemblies

The iPhone 4S home button compared to the iPhone 4 home button. The iPhone 4S home button sits on the back of the digitizer assembly opposed to the mid-frame assembly like the iPhone 4

I still think it?s too early for us to see genuine part leaks for the next generation iPhone. Any little detail could change when it comes to the actual production model. Especially something such as a home button that has no mechanical parts involved. They could just be changing out the rubber gasket for a more solid button assembly. For now, I?d say it?s too early to tell whether or not this could end up in a production unit.

Source: MacRumors

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/A52dUBAli8Q/story01.htm

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Motorcycle Club?s Attorney Scoffs at FBI Assessment

Image: FBI

A lawyer representing an alleged crime syndicate is crying foul over a Federal Bureau of Investigation assessment that a motorcycle gang trademarked its patch to prevent infiltration by undercover officers.

The FBI assessment, which Threat Level reported Wednesday, concluded that the Vagos Motorcycle Club, which the bureau has declared an outlaw motorcycle gang based in Southern California, has trademarked its jacket patch ? replete with the trademark registration symbol ? to block ?law enforcement agencies from inserting undercover officers? into the club.

?It?s the most ridiculous thing I?ve ever heard in my life,? Joseph Yanny, the group?s attorney, said in a telephone interview from Los Angeles. Yanny quipped that the bureau, in coming to its conclusions, was likely ?interviewing clowns in Vegas.?

The bureau did not respond for immediate comment.

Yanny said the trademarking, which many motorcycle clubs have undertaken, was done ?to protect the intellectual property, to prevent it from being knocked off by others, and improper use.?

In a 2011 FBI ?law enforcement sensitive? memo (.pdf) the agency?s Phoenix bureau circulated to several FBI offices across the nation, the agency said, ?The Vagos believe they will have exclusive rights to the Vagos patch and no one, including undercover officers, would be able to wear the patch without the consent of the International Vagos OMG (Outlaw Motorcycle Gang) leadership.?

The memo, unearthed Tuesday, warns infiltrating law enforcement officers that they ?may be placing themselves in danger? if they don?t have the registration symbol at the bottom of the 600-member club?s patch, which is the insignia of Loki, the god of mischief.

The patch became a registered mark last month.

Source: http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/04/fbi-vagos-assesment/

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Tim Berners-Lee: We Don?t Need Arbitrary New TLDs

Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the web, is ?not a fan? of the arbitrary new top level domains (TLDs) that the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is currently offering, he told Wired.co.uk in a press conference at W3C.

He was referring to Icann?s application window for brands to bid for the domain name suffix of their choosing from dot brand (for example .pepsi or .HTC) or dot product (.drinks or .horses), which closes on Friday 20 April.

?My personal perspective is that what we need in the domain system is stability,? he said. ?We don?t need new arbitrary new TLDs.?

He argued that some people assume that the new generic TLDs are creating great economic benefit but that there are already plenty of TLDs ? including dot org, dot com and dot net ? to choose from. ?There?s plenty of space,? he said. ?If you just add one character to the length of the domain name you have 26 times as many names you can choose from. There?s no shortage.?

For Berners-Lee, the ?only role? for a new domain name is ?if you are making something that is socially different, such as dot org.? He said that dot org was interesting because it captures the fact that you know that any website with that suffix is a non-profit.

?But when it comes to arbitrary new TLDs I am not a big fan.? He said that the ?idea of having to go out and register my trademarks? in these new spaces does not appeal to him.

This post first appeared on Wired.co.uk.

Source: http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2012/04/tim-berners-lee-we-dont-need-arbitrary-new-tlds/

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Leaked Office 15 Video Touts Cloud Features

Leaked Office 15 Video Touts Cloud FeaturesIn a leaked promo video for Office 15, Microsoft seems eager to take on Google Docs and Apple’s iCloud with its own online sync features.

?It’s your Office. It goes wherever you go,? says the short video, which was posted by Rafeal Rivera of Within Windows. When users sign into Office 15, the video says, they can easily pick up where they left off on any device.

As detailed in previous leaks, Office 15 users will be able to sign in to several Web services, including SkyDrive, Flickr, Hotmail, and Windows Live Messenger. There’s also a new online service in Office 15 called ?My Office,? but how that works is still unclear.

Although Office 2010 already allows users to save documents online, the feature is relegated to a separate ?Save & Send? menu. As detailed in previous leaks, Office 15 will have a single menu for offline and online storage locations. With Windows 8, Microsoft will take this a step further by allowing online files to sync automatically with a PC.

Online features are crucial for Office given the competition from Apple and Google. With Apple’s Mac OS X Mountain Lion, users will be able to save iWork documents directly to iCloud, making them available on the iPhone, iPad, desktop Web browsers, and other Macs. Of course, Google Docs exists primarily online, so users can access their documents in any browser with no extra effort.

Microsoft has not yet announced a release date for Office 15, but the company plans to release a public beta during the summer. A leaked product roadmap suggests an early 2013 release date for the finished product.

Follow Jared on Twitter, Facebook or Google+ for even more tech news and commentary.

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=156e5ae1a4b41f3ee2e855da6274db29

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Hubble Captures Incredible New Panorama of Tarantula Nebula

Millions of young stars shine brightly in this enormous stellar nursery at the heart of the Tarantula Nebula.

The Hubble space telescope captured this amazing panorama, which reveals intricate details about the expanse known as 30 Doradus. Located about 170,000 light-years away in the Large Magellanic Cloud ? a small galaxy orbiting our Milky Way ? 30 Doradus is one of the largest and most prolific star-forming regions in our galactic neck of the woods.

The region is so huge that, if it were as close to us as the Orion Nebula (the nearest stellar nursery to Earth, about 1,300 light-years away), it would be the size of 60 full moons in the sky and glow so brightly that it could cast shadows on the ground.

Though 30 Doradus isn?t quite that close, Hubble can still resolve the individual stars inside the region, allowing astronomers to study the lives of stars in detail.

Stars are born when a mass of gas and dust collapses under its own weight. The center of this mass gravitationally attracts more material, growing larger and heavier. The extra material increases the density and temperature in the central region. Eventually, the mass reaches a critical point and hydrogen will begin fusing into helium. The star ignites, releasing copious amounts of heat and energy.

Inside 30 Doradus, Hubble can spot stellar babies, only a few thousand years old and still wrapped in the remnants of the dusky cloud of gas that gave rise to them. It can also see massive stars a few tens of millions of years old, which burn through their fuel fast and die young.

The white region in the left side of the picture contains some of the most massive stars in the universe, weighing in at hundreds of times the sun?s mass. This stellar cluster is roughly 2 million to 3 million years old and contains about 500,000 stars in total. Intense ultraviolet light released by the young stars pushes against the surrounding gas and dust, carving out the beautiful structures and filigrees seen in this image. Some of this gas and dust will be mushed together, increasing its density and potentially sparking the birth of more new stars.

The new image was released Apr. 17 in honor of Hubble?s 22nd year in orbit. You can download the image at 4,000 x 3,200 pixels, but if you want to really zoom in on the picture, download the insanely large 20,323 x 16,259-pixel version. (Warning: It?s 643 MB.)

Image: NASA, ESA, ESO, D. Lennon and E. Sabbi (ESA/STScI), J. Anderson, S. E. de Mink, R. van der Marel, T. Sohn, and N. Walborn (STScI), N. Bastian (Excellence Cluster, Munich), L. Bedin (INAF, Padua), E. Bressert (ESO), P. Crowther (Sheffield), A. de Koter (Amsterdam), C. Evans (UKATC/STFC, Edinburgh), A. Herrero (IAC, Tenerife), N. Langer (AifA, Bonn), I. Platais (JHU) and H. Sana (Amsterdam)

Source: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/04/hubble-tarantula-nebula/

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UK department store John Lewis launches broadband service, get in on the ground floor

UK department store John Lewis launches broadband service, get in on the ground floorIf you live in the UK, and were thinking “If only I could get my broadband from the same place I get my crystal tumbler set” then maybe now you can. Department store John Lewis, a favorite for wedding lists, furniture and homeware is branching out into the British ISP game. The standard package will be £11 a month (not including line rental,) offering “up to” 16Mb speeds and a 20GB data cap. More eager users can pay an extra £7 to remove that download limit. Both bundles benefit from a free phone support, no activation fee and, of course, wireless router. Sound like your kind of deal? Head down to the source link, or past the haberdashery section to find out more.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/04/22/uk-department-store-john-lewis-launches-broadband-service-get-i/

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Get Social: 11 Management Systems That Can Help

Get Social: 11 Management Systems That Can Help


Remember the early days of the Web, when publishing and managing content was a Wild West of HTML? Organizations soon went from asking, “What do we do with this thing?” to “What don’t we do with this thing?” To maintain some semblance of control, management systems were developed and deployed.

The same thing is happening now with social media. As organizations find new and increasingly sophisticated ways to use social media, they are finding that they need a way to manage their efforts and measure the outcomes.

Enter social media management systems (SMMSs), which enable organizations to do things like publish on multiple social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Pinterest; schedule and stage posts; apply rights management schemes; aggregate feedback; measure effectiveness across channels; and report results in ways that are meaningful to specific departments and organizations.

There are many SMMS companies to choose from. Some offer stand-alone products; others are part of bigger customer relationship management and content management systems. All, however, are designed to help organizations apply order to social media marketing and engagement efforts. According to Social Media Explorer, there are eight functions of social media management systems. Each function is listed below, followed by my comments:

Monitoring. Monitoring allows your company basically to search on the Web for mentions of your company, your competitors, your industry, specific products, and so on.

Publishing. Delivering relevant content is a big part of any organization’s social media success, and an SMMS should help your organization develop and effectively deliver that content.

Engagement. SMMSs make it easier for organizations to respond to and engage with their customers and potential customers.

Organizational management. Just as traditional content management systems enable companies to establish workflow, versioning, rights management, and content vetting, SMMSs let companies manage social content and reduce the risks of social networking. CMS and SMMS systems are likely to converge over time.

Lead and conversion tracking. SMMSs allow organizations to turn social media activity into business leads.

Measurement. What’s measured matters, and what matters is measured. SMMSs enable companies to determine the effectiveness of current efforts and adjust future efforts based on actionable metrics.

Customer relationship management. Social Media Explorer predicts that CRM will be the next big thing in this space, and I think they’re right. (See Salesforce.com’s acquisition of SMMS platform Radian6.) Companies are already finding that social networks are a great place for effective customer service and help desk functions. Full-blown CRM can’t be far behind.

Social advertising management. SMMSs help companies develop, manage, and evolve social advertising and marketing campaigns.

In this slideshow, we offer a look at 11 social management systems. They differ in scope and capability and represent just the tip of the SMMS iceberg. But we hope the list provides a sense of what’s currently available and helps you see how these systems could benefit your organization’s social media efforts.

Many Needs For Social Media Management Remember the early days of the Web, when publishing and managing content was a Wild West of HTML? Organizations soon went from asking, “What do we do with this thing?” to “What don’t we do with this thing?” To maintain some semblance of control, management systems were developed and deployed.

The same thing is happening now with social media. As organizations find new and increasingly sophisticated ways to use social media, they are finding that they need a way to manage their efforts and measure the outcomes.

Enter social media management systems (SMMSs), which enable organizations to do things like publish on multiple social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Pinterest; schedule and stage posts; apply rights management schemes; aggregate feedback; measure effectiveness across channels; and report results in ways that are meaningful to specific departments and organizations.

There are many SMMS companies to choose from. Some offer stand-alone products; others are part of bigger customer relationship management and content management systems. All, however, are designed to help organizations apply order to social media marketing and engagement efforts. According to Social Media Explorer, there are eight functions of social media management systems. Each function is listed below, followed by my comments:

Monitoring. Monitoring allows your company basically to search on the Web for mentions of your company, your competitors, your industry, specific products, and so on.

Publishing. Delivering relevant content is a big part of any organization’s social media success, and an SMMS should help your organization develop and effectively deliver that content.

Engagement. SMMSs make it easier for organizations to respond to and engage with their customers and potential customers.

Organizational management. Just as traditional content management systems enable companies to establish workflow, versioning, rights management, and content vetting, SMMSs let companies manage social content and reduce the risks of social networking. CMS and SMMS systems are likely to converge over time.

Lead and conversion tracking. SMMSs allow organizations to turn social media activity into business leads.

Measurement. What’s measured matters, and what matters is measured. SMMSs enable companies to determine the effectiveness of current efforts and adjust future efforts based on actionable metrics.

Customer relationship management. Social Media Explorer predicts that CRM will be the next big thing in this space, and I think they’re right. (See Salesforce.com’s acquisition of SMMS platform Radian6.) Companies are already finding that social networks are a great place for effective customer service and help desk functions. Full-blown CRM can’t be far behind.

Social advertising management. SMMSs help companies develop, manage, and evolve social advertising and marketing campaigns.

In this slideshow, we offer a look at 11 social management systems. They differ in scope and capability and represent just the tip of the SMMS iceberg. But we hope the list provides a sense of what’s currently available and helps you see how these systems could benefit your organization’s social media efforts.


Social media management systems can help your organization manage and measure increasingly sophisticated social strategies.





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Make Search Engines Love Your Site With This SEO Software

If you have something great to share with the world, there’s no better place than the Web to do it. But you need more than a website; you need the perfect domain name and all the other things that optimize your site for search engines. These three programs and suites help you harness the power of search engine optimization to make your website a highly-ranked hit. SEO software doesn’t come cheap, so research these well to see which best suits your business.

Market Samurai

Creating a money-making online venture is not a simple challenge. Market Samurai is a comprehensive suite of tools aimed at making the process easier by helping you track down lucrative keywords, buy the right domain for the job, and more.

Market Samurai suite screenshotThe many tools of the Market Samurai suite tackle different parts of the SEO problem.Some applications can be mastered (or at least learned) just by playing with their different parts; Market Samurai is not one of them. Market Samurai is a large application, divided into eight modules: Rank Tracker, Keyword Research, SEO Competition, Domains, Monetization, Find Content, Publish Content, and Promotion. Some of the modules display tabular interfaces brimming with arcane acronyms like RDD, DMZ (it’s not what you think), and my personal favorite, BLEG. Thankfully, you can hover over a column header to get a more complete definition of what it means, and there is also an online glossary. Although some modules are more useful than others, the suite itself helps you understand which ones are likely to help you the most.

Read the full review and download Market Samurai ($149, twelve-day free trial).

Rank Tracker

If you have a product or service to sell, you probably want prospective customers to find you. For that to happen, you need to rank well on search engine queries relevant to what you do (“carpenter in Minnesota”). Rank Tracker Professional is not as comprehensive as Market Samurai, but it can help you plot and analyze your keyword performance on the path to search-engine stardom.

Rank Tracker keyword screenshotRank Tracker can tell you how popular your keywords are with search engines…and with your competitors.If you read “search engine” as “Google,” that’s understandable: Google is pretty much synonymous with search these days, and much of the search engine optimization (SEO) advice available online today revolves around the search giant’s secret ranking algorithm. Still, Rank Tracker doesn’t play favorites, and can search for your keywords across a staggering variety of search engines, starting from large international engines like Yandex (important if you’re optimizing for Russia), all the way to obscure sites like Jafose.com (yes, that’s a search engine). You can also search location-specific editions of the large engines, such as Google Romania or Bing Turkey.

Read the full review and download Rank Tracker ($100, shareware).

Advanced Web Ranking

Advanced Web Ranking is a cross-platform application with a beautiful interface and one major purpose in life: To help you get great search engine rankings. It does this using an array of different tools letting you inspect your website and search engine performance from various angles.

Advanced Web Ranking screenshotAlthough Advanced Web Ranking is not always easy for a novice to use, it’s easy on the eyes.Advanced Web Ranking’s Keyword Difficulty module is supposed to help you understand how difficult it would be to rank for a given keyword, but it is not simple to use. Much like Rank Tracker and Market Samurai, Advanced Web Ranking has a complex interface subdivided into several distinct modules (Rankings, Analytics, Links, Social, and more). Its interface feels remarkably slick and polished. Advanced Web Ranking is Java-based, and the controls used are not standard Windows controls, but they’re large, clear, and elegant. Like Market Samurai, Advanced Web Ranking lines up the various modules on the left edge of the window, as a large vertical toolbar. But unlike Market Samurai, Advanced Web Ranking does not assume any specific workflow, or provide much in the way of search engine optimization tips and tricks. Online documentation exists, but it’s mainly in the form of text, not videos.

Read the full review and download Advanced Web Ranking ($99, 30-day free trial).

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=7dfc0cfa3968540e8d3c1607b77e9ac4

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How to Create a Bootable Mac OS X Flash Drive

A bootable Mac OS X thumb drive comes in handy when you need to troubleshoot OS issues for yourself, your family, or your friends. It’s also extremely useful for keeping your basic setup consistent across multiple computers, if you find yourself switching hardware regularly; and I’ve had fun in the past setting up a bootable USB keychain loaded with all the apps and files I need to turn any Mac-compatible computer into a viable media center quickly and easily.

With Mac OS X Lion and a new piece of free software, it’s easier than ever to create a USB keychain that you can boot from. All you need is a few minutes, a copy of Lion, and a USB flash drive with at least 4GB of storage (though more is preferable).

Preparation

The first step in getting Lion onto your USB drive is to obtain a copy of the OS itself. Unfortunately, the file you download from the Mac App Store to your computer deletes itself after you update to Lion, so you’ll probably need to redownload the OS update.

This is a simple but slightly time-consuming process. Go into the App Store application and open the Purchases tab at the top of the screen. From there, you should see OS X Lion as one of your previous purchases. Click the Download button next to Lion, note the directory that it downloads to and wait for the download to finish. During testing it took me about 50 minutes to redownload the 4GB or so of content that comprises Lion. Once the OS has finished downloading (and you’ve verified that Lion has landed safely in your Applications folder), you’re ready to transfer it to your trusty USB flash drive.

Create a Bootable Mac OS X Flash DriveIf you already own a copy of OS X Lion, you should be able to download a fresh copy at any time from the Purchases tab of the Mac App Store.

To streamline the process, download the free Lion DiscMaker app. Downloading a third-party app just to handle this process is a bit of a bother, but Lion Discmaker enormously simplifies the process of installing Lion on a USB keychain.

Now, before you start formatting your drive, back up anything currently on your flash drive that you’d like to keep–because this process will completely erase the contents of the USB drive and rewrite it with a copy of Lion. You have been warned!

Creating Your Bootable Drive

Lion DiscMaker makes this part of the process a snap. Start the Lion DiscMaker app with your USB flash drive plugged in and with the Lion install file sitting inside your application folder. The app will give you the option of creating a bootable drive out of either a DVD or a USB keychain. Select the USB keychain option. (If you happen to own a Mac with a disc drive, consider creating a DVD backup of Lion. I prefer keeping Lion on a USB keychain so that I can add files to the USB drive to customize the installation; but if you’re just looking for a bootable copy to troubleshoot your hardware, feel free to go with the DVD option and save yourself a little cash.)

Create a Bootable Mac OS X Flash DriveLion DiscMaker makes it easy to create a bootable thumb drive.

Once you’ve indicated that you want use a bootable drive, the app will ask whether you’d like to use a USB thumb drive or some other kind of disk. Select the USB thumb drive option again; and when prompted, choose the disk that you’d like to install Lion to. Select your flash drive and you should be ready to rock.

If you’re using a thumb drive that has only 4GB of free space, Lion DiscMaker will remind you that you won’t get a complete of OS X Lion package because there won’t be room for the “additional speech voices” package. This should be no great loss. Select Okay and then, to confirm that you’re aware the volume will be erased, click the Erase then create the disk button.

The copy procedure will take a few minutes and will open a few windows in your finder automatically, but Lion Discmaker should automate the whole process. All you have to do is wait for your Mac to cease displaying its “Copy in progress, please wait…” message, which will indicate that DiscMaker has finished installing Lion onto your flash drive. Once that’s done, you’ll have a bootable USB flash drive that fits in your pocket and can handle system recovery, OS installation, and even basic Web browsing in a pinch.

If you have any space left over on your flash drive, you can add a few of your favorite applications and files, to customize a new installation. Regrettably, these files won’t be accessible when you boot directly from the USB flash drive; but once the installation is finished, they can help you save considerable time while setting up a new computer.

Of course the bootable drive that this method creates is no substitute for a fully customized Mac OS X Lion-based computer, but considering how fast and easy the drive is to set up–and how much time it could save you the next time you need to reinstall or troubleshoot your Mac OS X–there’s no good reason not to make your own bootable copy of Lion to carry in your pocket. Good luck!

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=113da7025f65dbc55ba6ad597a29c114

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Toshiba Excite 10 LE Review: Lightweight Tablet, Unfortunate Display

In a sea of me-too tablet slabs, the Toshiba Excite 10 LE?running Android 3.0 (Honeycomb)?distinguishes itself on two key metrics. First, at 1.18 pounds, it’s the lightest 10-inch-size tablet we’ve seen to date. Second, it’s the slimmest, measuring just 0.3 inch thick. Sadly, Toshiba made a few questionable design choices in its construction and display that detract from using it, and make it a poor choice.

Another reason to stay clear: You’ll be paying a little extra for the 16GB version: $530, versus $499 for the 16GB Apple iPad. (For 32GB, you’ll pay $600?the same price as Apple’s iPad, but $100 more than Asus charges for its same-capacity?and better-performing?Transformer Prime.)

Design Trade-Offs

Make no mistake about the engineering significance of Toshiba’s Excite 10 LE: Constructed of magnesium alloy, the tablet feels noticeably lighter than competing models, including the close-in-weight Samsung Galaxy Tab Wi-Fi 10.1 (1.23 pounds). The Excite 10 LE was well balanced in the hand, and felt easy to hold one-handed in the vertical or portrait orientation, a common way of holding a tablet for reading books, magazines, and the like. No fewer than a dozen editors around the office handled the Excite, and all preferred the weight of the Excite over that of the Apple iPad 2, the current iPad, the Samsung Galaxy Tab, or the Asus Transformer Prime.

The slim design does come with some trade-offs in physical construction. For one thing, the tablet is squared off around the bottom edges, which means that the Excite lacks the comfy, smooth tapering found on the iPad 2, the third-generation iPad, and the Asus Transformer Prime. For another, the edges of the tablet have some give and some gaps, so that they actually flex away from the Gorilla Glass screen. While I wouldn’t go so far as to say it feels as if it would snap in use, I wouldn’t want to toss it into a jammed backpack and put any serious stress on it; an iPad could withstand that, but the Excite does not feel as if it would.

A few more design gripes, and one plus: The plus is that the Excite conveniently puts all of its ports?including microUSB (with support for USB On-the-Go, an unusual find), micro-HDMI, and microSD?in a row, along the left-hand side in landscape orientation. Above those ports sits the awkwardly-placed headphone jack. And the the slim, hard-plastic buttons for power, volume, and rotation lock?running along the top of the tablet when you hold it in landscape mode?lack distinction and are awkward to adjust, which makes them decidedly annoying to use. Finally, Toshiba continues to rely on a bulky proprietary charging cable that plugs into the centrally located dock connector (and jacks into the USB brick for power). Yet, oddly, you don’t use this cable to transfer data directly to the tablet; for that task, you’ll need a microUSB cable.

Mediocre Performance

The Excite 10 LE is the first Honeycomb tablet I’ve used in a while that had quite as many glitches and crashes as the Excite did. The Excite uses Texas Instruments’ OMAP 4430 processor, which makes me speculate that perhaps Toshiba and TI need to work harder on optimizing the Excite hardware to work with Android 3.2.1 Honeycomb. Or perhaps Toshiba’s implementation of the OMAP processor somehow makes processing tradeoffs in order to provide better battery life and performance in the tablet’s slim form.

Whatever the reason, be aware that the Excite, with its launch software, crashed often on Google’s own apps. The camera app crashed frequently; so did the Gallery app, e-mail, and the Web browser. Other programs I tried seemed fine; still others seemed to chug along compared with a smoother experience on other Android models. Toshiba says the Excite is upgradable to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, but really, with no solid ETA for that upgrade, it’s a thin promise from a company that hasn’t had a good update track record. It’s also odd that it’s taking Toshiba so long, since the company doesn’t do any custom launchers or overlay tweaks to Android; instead, the company just loads on a bunch of apps to get you going out the gate, apps that include Netflix, Quickoffice, and Toshiba’s own media player app.

Besides crashes, I noticed another glitch in the Gallery app when I viewed a folder of high-resolution digital SLR images. Like some other Android tablets (including several of the Samsung Galaxy Tab models running the TouchWiz software), the Excite struggles with properly rendering these high-resolution images on the first go. At least, though, the Excite gets there, sharpening up the preview render without requiring you to do something like zooming into the image first (as the affected Samsung models do). But it takes a moment, and your eyes can often feel as if someone’s playing a trick on you.

Beyond the glitchy software, the Excite has a few other performance issues. Specifically, overall responsiveness was sluggish, and the touchscreen didn’t always respond smoothly to my fingers.

The Excite 10 LE scored poorly in our display tests, too. The display lacked the color accuracy and clarity of like-resolution tablets. More critically, all of our test screens?from still images to a Web page to test patterns?were marred by a tattoolike pattern imprinted on the display. The pattern is actually the touchscreen interface itself, and it’s more distracting?more visible?than the usual screen-door, gridlike touch technologies seen on other tablets.

On our SunSpider JavaScript benchmark browser speed test, the Excite was right in the mix, and on our custom Web-page loading test, it took 2.9 seconds to load a page?faster than the iPad 2′s 3.3 seconds, and slower than the Transformer Prime’s 2.6 seconds. On the GLBenchmark test with antialiasing off, it was competitive with the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Wi-Fi, at 30.9 frames per second, but far short of the Transformer Prime’s 56 fps. Finally, in our subjective testing, stills and videos produced by the Excite’s camera were judged only fair; images had a lot of noise, and lacked sharpness.

Bottom Line

Physically, the Excite 10 LE still excites me, but solely from the standpoint of the ideal it represents in weight and size. I look forward to the day when tablet makers can achieve lighter weights and thinner designs, as the Excite has, but do so without making a slew of usability, performance, and price tradeoffs. As it stands, however, this lightweight tablet has to be relegated to the annals of tablet experiments.

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=9a9c5bd626c7a908f75510ae4dd63f1a

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Is CISPA Worth Saving?

Does the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) have any chance of passing into law?

The cybersecurity bill has come under sustained assault by civil liberties groups, who have criticized it for using overly broad language, including the definition of what constitutes a “cyber attack” and which types of data can be shared. They worry that it could result in information sharing programs that compromise people’s current privacy protections.



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“Many of the major civil liberties groups like EFF and ACLU have legitimately criticized the substance of the bill, which would give companies a free pass to share their customers’ private information with the government,” said security and privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian on his blog.

Even the White House weighed in Tuesday, though it was careful not to name any specific bills–and CISPA isn’t the only proposed cybersecurity legislation in the House. “The nation’s critical infrastructure cyber vulnerabilities will not be addressed by information sharing alone,” National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said in a statement confirming that the Obama administration wouldn’t stand for information sharing in the absence of privacy protections.

[ For more on the privacy concerns about CISPA, see CISPA Bill: 5 Main Privacy Worries. ]

“Information sharing provisions must include robust safeguards to preserve the privacy and civil liberties of our citizens,” she said. “Legislation without new authorities to address our nation’s critical infrastructure vulnerabilities, or legislation that would sacrifice the privacy of our citizens in the name of security, will not meet our nation’s urgent needs.”

Of course, draft bills aren’t fixed in stone; they can be revised or amended, and that’s just what’s been happening with CISPA. “In recent redrafts, the bill has been revised to include data minimization language to reduce the amount of detailed information businesses would share with the government,” said Bill Weber, a partner at the law firm Baker Hoestler, on the Data Privacy Monitor blog.

In addition, “the bill now eliminates references to theft of [intellectual property] that raised concerns similar to the anti-piracy/anti-counterfeiting bills that withered in the face of opposition earlier this year,” he said, referring to SOPA and PIPA. Finally, a revised version of the bill “would also now allow lawsuits against the government for intentional or willful improper disclosure of personal data that’s been collected,” which could help assuage privacy groups worried about a slide into surveillance–not just sharing–and a repeat of the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping program.

If privacy experts see information sharing as dangerous territory, security experts see it as essential for helping private businesses resist today’s onslaught of advanced persistent threats (APTs). “The intent behind CISPA is very good, which is that we’ve really got to do better sharing here,” said Harry Sverdlove, CTO of endpoint security firm Bit9, via phone. “So there does need to be some way to do this for companies that want to do this, that protect them from the liability and lawsuits.”

On the other hand, how do you translate those requirements into the language of a bill? “As a technologist, I always get queasy if legislation has too many specifics in it–what is information sharing; what is a cyber attack? But the more vague you make the bill, the more it worries privacy organizations,” said Sverdlove. “Fortunately, I’m not a legislator, and [I] don’t have to do that kabuki dance about how to get specific without getting too specific.”

Of course, it remains to be seen whether CISPA–in some form–will pass into law. Sverdlove, for one, thinks it’s likely that the bill will get tabled for now but will be used as a blueprint for future cybersecurity legislation. Regardless of whether or not that happens, who would have predicted just a year ago that Congress would now be discussing ways to improve the sharing of threat intelligence between the public and private sectors to help block APTs?

When picking endpoint protection software, step one is to ask users what they think. Also in the new, all-digital Security Software: Listen Up! issue of InformationWeek: CIO Chad Fulgham gives us an exclusive look at the agency’s new case management system, Sentinel; and a look at how LTE changes mobility. (Free registration required.)

Source: http://feeds.informationweek.com/click.phdo?i=405a94514ec72fe5cd1f51cbd1582d7f

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