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Microsoft WorldWide Telescope blasts off
Microsoft Corp. launched its WorldWide Telescope late Monday, bringing the free Web-based program for zooming around the universe ...


USAToday - 7 hours ago

EarthLink pulls plug on Philly Wi-Fi
EarthLink is pulling the plug on its troubled wireless high-speed Internet network in Philadelphia, once touted as a model for ...


USAToday - 7 hours ago

Vatican: Alien belief doesn't contradict faith
The Vatican's chief astronomer says that believing in aliens does not contradict faith in God.


USAToday - 7 hours ago

MIT students show power of open cellphone systems
What do you want your cellphone to be able to do?


USAToday - 7 hours ago

Sprints CEO asks shareholders' patience
(AP)
AP - Sprint Nextel Corp. CEO Dan Hesse says the company is taking the necessary steps to regain its momentum against its wireless competitors.
Yahoo - 7 hours ago

Taiwanese firm debuts potential rival to Apple's iPhone2
(AFP)
AFP - Taiwan's High Tech Computer Corp. unveiled Tuesday a mobile phone it said was designed make web-browsing as easy as making phone calls, with the device seen as a rival to Apple's upcoming iPhone2.
Yahoo - 7 hours ago

Wind-Powered Energy More Than Just Hot Air
Within 20 years, the United States could be generating as much energy from the wind as it currently gets from nuclear power, the Energy Department says as it lays out a plan for prospective growth.


Wired News - 7 hours ago

Microsoft's Bid for Family-Friendly Xbox Games
With Halo and Gears of War, Microsoft's got the grown-up gamer covered. Now its British studio, Rare, is tasked with a more difficult challenge: Making games that kids and parents can both enjoy.


Wired News - 7 hours ago

HP Buying EDS With Its Head in the Clouds
News from Portfolio.com
Five years ago, if Hewlett-Packard bought EDS, everyone would've thought it was pretty much like when IBM bought PwC -- a play to create a powerful data processing consulting business that could coexist with a computer hardware business. In fact, that's been a great model for IBM.
But with HP today buying EDS for $12 billion, the smart thinking goes in a different direction. It's looking like a red-hot area going forward for IBM, Amazon and Google will be so-called cloud computing -- a.k.a. hardware as a service.
If you're a startup or a corporate IT manager, you increasingly won't have to buy computers to run your business. You just rent capabilities from some computing giant and move the information there and back over the internet. If something crashes, the data is always backed up and stored somewhere out there in the cloud. This is the ubiquitous computing idea IBM has pushed for a decade -- making computer power something like electric power.
If you tack together some of HP's other purchases under CEO Mark Hurd -- as Om Malik did -- it seems even more obvious that HP is at least as interested in cloud computing as consulting. And EDS is a solid cloud-computing play because a core business is owning and running giant data centers.
As part of the interview I did with Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos (the video is now on Portfolio.com), we discussed Amazon's push into cloud computing.
"We've been working on our Infrastructure Web Services for four years," Bezos said. "We launched our first one two years ago, the Simple Storage Service, and I am astonished -- I rarely meet a startup company these days who isn't using our web services and now we're starting to get, you know, deployment inside Enterprise level data centers as well. So it's a very exciting."
Asked about Google's plans to get into a similar business, Bezos said: "Well ... we really do have a practice of not talking about other companies. But this, like our retail business, (there) is not going to be one winner. I think there are going to be multiple winners pursuing different flavors or strategies, different kinds of products.... I think our web services business is going to be part of what becomes an important industry. And ... important industries are rarely made by single companies."
So maybe there is room for HP, Amazon, IBM, Google and others to play in the cloud computing space. The HP deal is telling us that the concept is ready for prime time.


Wired News - 7 hours ago

Don't Peel & Stick Me, Bro!
Taser International is introducing a peel and stick laminate that "becomes electrified, providing a powerful deterrent to protect officers and keep suspects or rioters at bay." What could possibly go wrong?


Wired News - 7 hours ago

Modified Human Embryo Stirs Fears of 'Designer Babies'
Scientists genetically alter a human embryo for the first time, drawing fire from critics who say they're tampering with nature and run the risk of creating babies with specific genetic traits, a charge the lab coats deny.


Wired News - 7 hours ago

'Boom Blox' is a strong title for Wii
Boom Blox, a new family game from Electronic Arts and shepherded by director Steven Spielberg, proves that any developer can make a great, involving Wii game when they truly "get" both the console's strengths and its shortcomings.
MSNBC - 7 hours ago

Corporate America's rejection of Vista
Companies across corporate America are finding themselves similarly vexed by Vista. The resulting delay or rejection of Microsoft's flagship product is stepping up pressure on the company to expand other areas of its business, including online software.
MSNBC - 7 hours ago

'Indiana Jones' would make a bad archaeologist
Actual archaeologists say they like Indiana Jones and Hollywood's movies about his fictional exploits ” but they wouldn't necessarily want to work alongside him on a dig.
MSNBC - 7 hours ago

Geek reputation hurting math profession
No great surprise, but the numbers in a new study show mathematicians are viewed as geeks, a stereotype that keeps students from studying math or using the subject later in life.
MSNBC - 7 hours ago

Scarlett Johansson album debuts on Imeem
It's the latest high-profile music release to use a streaming music site for a preview, which pulls in ad revenue while making users wait for a physical download.
CNET - 7 hours ago

Red Hat lives on the edge with Fedora 9
The ninth incarnation of Red Hat's hobbyist version of Linux made a jump Ubuntu couldn't: KDE 4.
CNET - 7 hours ago

'Grand Theft Auto IV' nets Guinness record
The hit game nets a new honor and breaks a record held previously by the last Harry Potter book.
CNET - 7 hours ago

For Hezbollah, it's fiber warfare
Tension increases in Lebanon over the design of secure, attack-resistant data networks, as Hezbollah defends the private fiber-optic network it has laid there.
CNET - 7 hours ago

Apple to highlight iPhone platform development at WWDC
At its Worldwide Developers Conference, developers can work with Apple engineers to design apps that focus on the device's multi-touch user screen, animation tech, and APIs.
CNET - 7 hours ago

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