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Dienstag, 29. Mai 2012 00:00:00 Technik News
Aktualisiert: Vor 3 Min.
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Aktie fällt auf neuen Tiefstand.

Monitoring-Cockpit für Print, Web, Social Media.

Chinesischer Kurznachrichtendienst mit Punkte-System.

Samsung?s Galaxy S III launched in 28 countries on Tuesday, across Europe and the Middle East. But, the Galaxy S still has no U.S. release date.

Dell believes that within four years, twenty percent of servers sold across the world will be driven by chips not unlike the one in your cell phone. And on Tuesday, the company staked its claim to this future market, revealing that it has spent the last two years building such a machine -- a server packed with 48 low-power processors based on the same ARM architecture at the core of most iPhones, iPads, and Android devices.

Sergey Brin has once again hit the town with Project Glass -- but this time he let someone else wear Google's augmented reality headset. California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom wore the specs on his own talk show -- and told Wired all about it.

Two small asteroids buzzed by the Earth, zooming well within the moon?s orbit, over the last couple days. Neither posed any danger but the events were eagerly captured by amateur astronomers, and the second encounter was a record-setter.

SoftBank's Pantone 5 107SH is the world's first phone with a built-in geiger counter, capable of measuring radiation levels within 20 percent accuracy.

SARTRE, which is funded in part by the European Commission and includes Volvo as a partner, scored a proof-of-concept and PR success last week by having four vehicles drive in a ?road train? on a public highway near Barcelona, Spain, for over 200 kilometers at speeds up to 85 km/h.

_____________________________________________________________________CTHEORY: THEORY, TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE VOL 35, NOS 1-2 *** Visit CTHEORY Online: http://www.ctheory.net ***TBC 038 05/25/2012 Editors: Arthur and Marilouise Kroker_____________________________________________________________________ ...

Google refreshed its Chromebook hardware Tuesday, introducing a follow-up to last year's Series 5 laptop. Where the Series 5 felt a bit like a proof-of-concept, the Series 5 550 offers improved hardware design and beefier internal specs.

Most analysts are convinced that companies have moved or are moving to the cloud in a big way, writes Dick Weisinger, noting: "Forrester says that sometime this year we will have reached the point where 50 percent of companies are using some form of SaaS. The Yankee Group says that 41 percent of large companies ...

Perhaps the largest point of confusion with regards to the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) and cloud computing is the question of upon whose shoulders does compliance fall? In 2011, several cloud providers began asserting that their clouds were validated as PCI DSS compliant. That?s all well and good, but unfortunately this ...

After E3, a summer marketing push will accompany in-game changes that lead directly into Version 2.0 launching this fall.

It may not have a Retina display or quad-core graphics. Hell, it?s not even brand new, or even very clean. But it?s a freak of iPad nature, and it just sold on Ebay for $10,200.

Arson attacks over the weekend against a Mexican snack chip subsidiary of PepsiCo might be the first time Mexico's drug cartels have targeted a multinational corporation.

Eran Feigenbaum compares Google Apps to a bank in the days when a bank was a new idea. Just as a bank stores money, Google Apps stores data, and the onus is on Google to convince you and your business that this data is properly protected.

Just how early did the 99 percent feel the dominance of the 1 percent? Skeletal remains from prehistoric farming communities suggest that inequality was an early feature going back more than 7,000 years ago.

Thanks to the efforts of digital preservationists, one of the original sources of the online music revolution is back on the web. Yes, the Internet Underground Music Archive has been resurrected, complete with well over half a million song files.

*Uh, that's getting pretty breathless, but I guess it had to be said.http://amormundi.blogspot.it/2012/05/unbearable-stasis-of-accelerating.htmlSunday, May 27, 2012"The Unbearable Stasis of "Accelerating Change""Also posted at the World Future Society."Eric and I got haircuts yesterday afternoon, and while I was waiting I flipped through magazines. Peter Diamandis (who is clearly shaping up as this decade's go-to Kurzweil) had ...

*METROPOLIS has got some top-notch stuff in it. Heck of a mag.http://www.metropolismag.com/story/20120511/cities-of-the-imagination(...)" ?What?s going on now in the Gulf has rightly been called the Las Vegas of culture,? says Nezar AlSayyad, a professor of architecture, planning, urban design, and urban history at the University of California, Berkeley. ?But there is actually a well-established precedent ...

Bettina Chen, Alice Brooks, and Jennifer Kessler all studied math and science in school. But year after year, they noticed a problem. "As we got to higher levels of study, the number of women in our classes continued to decrease," says Books. She's not wrong. The numbers of women pursuing careers in STEM fields (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) are pretty grim.

If you're anything like me, you value your life. Which means you've probably avoided motorcycles despite their stellar fuel economy, small footprint and ability to weave through traffic like a snake through grass. But the benefits of riding a bike are often outweighed by their inherent vulnerability, not to mention the lack of creature comforts and cargo capacity. Lit Motors aims to change that.

During a total solar eclipse, Sir Arthur Eddington performs the first experimental test of Albert Einstein?s general theory of relativity.

Jon Black is not your typical rocker. Taking a cue from the the chiptune community, he is releasing his new album in a limited-edition run of hacked Nintendo Entertainment System cartridges. The carts, sourced from a used game store and eBay, come loaded with flash drives containing MP3s of the album and videos.

Wired scours the world's laboratories for the coolest and cutest animal robots.

The guy who turned "Bow-chicka-bow-WOW!" into the signature sound of porn music talks to Wired about the danger of shellfish, the hilarity of trousers and the robocomic that will make us all laugh in the future.

*I dunno if that thing's properly classifiable as a "microbot," but it's a neat-o hack with some interesting implications.via @futuristpaul

America is supposed to wind down its war in Afghanistan by 2014. But U.S. forces may continue to track Afghans for years after the conflict is officially done. Palm-sized sensors, developed for the American military, will remain littered across the Afghan countryside -- detecting anyone who moves nearby and reporting their locations back to a remote headquarters.

While his crewmates were away on the moon in the lunar module, the Apollo command module pilot was the loneliest man alive. How much lonelier would he have been if the LM never returned? A 1967 study looked at how the CMP might photograph a crashed LM from lunar orbit to provide accident investigators with essential data before returning to Earth alone.

Google's daily brainteaser helps hone your search skills.

This week's installment of by George R. R. Martin, are full of large-scale battles, but until now the show -- which plainly struggles to present the rich tapestry of Martin's world on a TV budget -- has avoided showing any such engagements.

*Maybe the $30 registration fee is to keep out all the LA special-FX guys who don't wanna buy in to "new media."juried competitionclick here for registration los angeles center for digital art & downtown film festival los angeles present:new media festivallos angelesJurors:Henry Priest, DFFLADirector, Downtown Film Festival Los AngelesRex Bruce, LACDA Director and ...