Gillmor Gang: Live from Dreamforce 1:30pm PT

Gillmore Gang test patternUpdate: The Gang is scheduled to start around 1:30pm. From the inside out, salesforce.com is a rapidly growing cloud computing company at the head of the enterprise social wave. From the outside in, the company's annual Dreamforce conference has landed in downtown San Francisco on the Moscone Center campus. Each year the conference grows in size, with more than 45,000 attendees streaming in this year. I've been employed at Salesforce for more than a year and a half, and in that time I've seen a steady march toward the goals that attracted me to the company. Many of these advances will be revealed over the course of the conference, freeing me at last to discuss and place them in the context of the Social Enterprise. With the coming release of iOS 5 and the continued advance of Android in the mobile space, the opportunity for using the social stream to improve our personal and business lives has never been more tangible. Gillmor Gang is Live from Dreamforce, at 1:30pm PT today. Steve's guests include Adam Bosworth, Robert Scoble, Kevin Marks, Dan Farber, and John Taschek. Click inside the post to watch.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ujfneak2nYA/

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ShopWell gives food buyers new tools for healthy eating

Silicon Valley start-up develops an algorithm that helps buyers match foods to their own individual health needs and eating preferences. And it doesn't let food manufacturers influence the "sacred" algorithm.

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13772_3-20096962-52/shopwell-gives-food-buyers-new-tools-for-healthy-eating/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=GeekGestalt

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Xbox 360 modders claim CPU hack, make it party like an N64 (video)

The security system built into the 360's motherboard has more layers than an onion, which is why previous hacks have generally focused on the optical drive instead. But a couple of circuit breakers named Gligli and Tiros claim to have finally freed up the console's CPU, allowing all 360 variants to boot homebrew software while also making them invulnerable to patches sent out by Microsoft. The video after the break purports to show the fruits of their labor, including an N64 emulator running on a version of Linux. It doesn't really prove anything, except perhaps the lengths these guys have gone to: they use various hardware tools to slow down the console's CPU and then confuse it with so-called 'glitch' pulses in an effort to make it forget its normal boot-up checks. Certainly not a trick for the average F-Zero X racer, particularly when speed-boosting around copy protection like this may be shady in the eyes of the law. (One more thing: don't be put off by the video's soundtrack -- starts out weird but gets better, baby.)

[Thanks, Rodolfo]

Continue reading Xbox 360 modders claim CPU hack, make it party like an N64 (video)

Xbox 360 modders claim CPU hack, make it party like an N64 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Aug 2011 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/08/31/xbox-360-modders-claim-cpu-hack-make-it-party-like-an-n64-vide/

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Nichicon claims smallest, quickest EV charger

Microsoft Very Serious About Finding Rustock Operators

Microsoft is serious about this whole "eliminating botnets" thing.

The company's offering a bounty for the operators behind the Rustock botnet, which the company helped disable in March. Before it went offline, the botnet proved capable of sending billions of spam e-mails per day.

In exchange for information leading to those operators' arrest and conviction and whatnot, Microsoft is now willing to pay some $250,000. That's a pretty big chunk of change, and the company's probably betting it's enough to persuade someone to sell their botnet-building buddy out.

"This reward offer stems from Microsoft's recognition that the Rustock botnet is responsible for a number of criminal activities and serves to underscore our commitment to tracking down those behind it," Richard Boscovich, senior attorney for Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit, wrote in a July 18 email posted on The Official Microsoft Blog. "The legal action Microsoft has taken in civil court has already been successful, helping us take down the Rustock botnet and disrupt its operations."

Translation: We want these people caught in the worst way.

Before its shutdown, estimates of Rustock's size varied between 1.1 million and 1.7 million infected computers, and the botnet may have been responsible for 47.5 percent of all spam spent worldwide by the end of 2010. Microsoft blocked the IP addresses controlling the botnet, in conjunction with a coordinated seizure of Rustock command-and-control servers located at five hosting providers in seven U.S. cities: Denver, Scranton, Pa., Kansas City, Dallas, Chicago, Seattle, and Columbus, Ohio.

Microsoft's been aggressive in the botnet-killing department. In February 2010, the company helped persuade a federal judge in Virginia to issue a temporary restraining order that cut off the 277 Internet domains associated with Waledac, which was blamed for producing more than 1.5 million spam messages per day. Having infected hundreds of thousands of computers around the world, Waledac was considered a big enough threat to attract the attention of not only Microsoft, but also Symantec, Shadowserver Foundation, the University of Washington and a handful of others joined together in an initiative termed "Operation b49."

At the time, security experts questioned whether such legal maneuvers would ultimately be sufficient to curb the increasingly endemic issue of botnets. Microsoft's latest bounty on Rustock's operators suggests the company is taking ever-harder steps to deal with the threat.


Source: http://feeds.ziffdavisenterprise.com/~r/RSS/MicrosoftWatch/~3/SWgaPfp27VA/microsoft_very_serious_about_finding_rustock_operators.html

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Sony Looks Into the Mirror to Boost Its DSLR Cred

Sony has announced two new additions to its SLT-A family of cameras: the A77 and A65. They offer 24.3MP effective resolution and have what Sony says is the world's first XGA OLED electronic viewfinder. Both cameras use the translucent mirror technology common to Sony's SLT-A family and offer progressive full HD video recording.

Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/73138.html

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