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Freitag, 01. März 2013 00:00:00 Technik News
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Renowned to-do list application Wunderlist is available for multiple platforms, including both Web and mobile. While you can get Wunderlist for Windows, the installation file alone is over 20MB, and this is before you even begin the installation. With Wunderlist for Pokki, there is no installation—once you have app platform (and excellent Windows 8 launcher) installed, you can start using Wunderlist less than a minute after deciding you want to. If you're a Wunderlist user, the Pokki version of the app will look very familiar, with every feature you've come to expect from other versions of Wunderlist. After logging into your account, you can start adding scheduled tasks and to-do items, with or without a date, placing them in your own custom lists. Wunderlist for Pokki comes with several useful keyboard shortcuts for easy browsing which you can easily learn by pressing "H." In fact, not only can you access your slick to-do list with one mouse click, you can easily access most of its features without having to click that mouse again. As with other Pokki apps, Wunderlist comes with tray badge notifications for overdue tasks, which will keep reminding you of the things you haven't done. With its customizable backgrounds, super-easy browsing and automatic mobile syncing, Wunderlist will make you to get things done. The Download button on the Product Information page takes you to the vendor's site, where you can download the latest version of the software directly into your Pokki installation.

If you run a one-man shop and you're looking to sell a product or service, you have a few options. You can build an e-commerce site from scratch, which requires time and expertise, or you can go with a turnkey marketplace like Etsy, which might not be a good fit for your product (unless it's a tea cozy). : a quick and simple way to create an e-commerce site for hawking your wares. Designed for "the smallest of small businesses," Soho Storefront officially launches next Tuesday as part of the company's Soho VIP package, which includes business amenities like professional designed group emails, secure cloud storage, various documents and templates, and so on. All you do is sign into your Planet Soho account, click through to your storefront, then start adding products and services. If you have just one or two, it literally takes a matter of minutes to start selling.

Microsoft may upgrade Office 2013 as often as four times a year, the company's top Office executive said this week, a massive change from decades of more measured development. introduced this year. In January, Kurt DelBene, who heads the Windows group, cited frequent updates when he introduced Office 365 Home Premium. "This is a major leap forward," said DelBene of his plan to transform the company's traditional three-year release cycle. But while it has trumpeted the faster pace of changes in Office-by-subscription, Microsoft has been mum about the details, including the frequency of those updates and upgrades, and what they will contain.

Western Digital capacity on hard disk drives (HDD). The discovery was made by HGST Labs, a company owned by Western Digital (WD), using a technique called nanolithography, which is used to imprint patterns on the thin film of hard drive platters where data is to be stored. The process overcomes the challenges associated with photolithography, a semiconductor technology used for making successively smaller circuit features in shorter wavelengths of light, among other things. The discovery allows for twice the bit density of today's disk drives. Nanolithography was used to make dense patterns of "magnetic islands" that appear as small dots in about 100,000 circular tracks required for disk drives.

browser into the Stable Channel, Google on Tuesday pushed its eventual successor—Chrome 26—into beta. application programming interface (API)—allowing developers to include speech recognition features in their applications—the new Chrome 26 beta stands out primarily for its use of a new spell-checking engine. .

Windows 8's uptake pace slowed in February for the third straight month, an analytics company said today. According to Net Applications, Windows 8's February usage share—including what the firm labeled as "touch" for Windows 8 and Windows RT—was 3% of all Windows PCs, up from January's 2.6%. Windows 8's share increase in February was about four-tenths of a percentage point, smaller than January's gain, which in turn was smaller than either December's or November's. in 2007: In its fourth month of availability, Vista powered approximately 4% of all Windows PCs. The full percentage point gap between Windows 8 and Vista was the largest so far in the tracking Computerworld has conducted.

MegaUpload lost a bid on Friday to see a trove of evidence held by U.S. prosecutors prior to expected to begin later this year in New Zealand. The country's Court of Appeal rejected two lower court rulings from last year ordering U.S. prosecutors to share more information to support their allegation that the file-sharing service profited by encouraging large-scale copyright infringement by its users. The decision is a minor setback for Megaupload's defendants, including founder Kim Dotcom, Finn Batato, Mathias Ortmann, and Bram van der Kolk. The in January 2012 in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on charges of criminal copyright infringement, money laundering, racketeering, and wire fraud. MegaUpload's attorneys could not be immediately reached. In its 49-page judgement, the three-judge Court of Appeals panel wrote that the scope of an extradition court is limited. Challenges to the reliability of material may be considered, but the interpretation of evidence "is more appropriate to a trial than to an extradition hearing," it found.

for short), which instantly opens Windows Explorer. (Aside: It always amazes me how many people don't really know that Explorer exists. But it's the go-to tool for finding and managing files. End of aside.) opens the Computer folder (formerly known as My Computer), which affords quick access to your drives. That's fine for some, but I prefer quick access to a specific folder, one that's buried a few levels deep and would require a bunch of extra clicks to reach.

The German Bundestag has adopted a controversial, but weakened, online copyright bill that gives publishers the exclusive right to make commercial use of their publications on the Internet. against systematic access to copyrighted content by search engine providers like Google and other services such as news aggregators. The Bundestag, the lower house of Germany's legislature, adopted the bill on Friday, by 293 votes to 243 with three abstentions. To become law, the bill still needs the approval of state government delegates in Germany's upper house, the Bundesrat, a Bundestag spokesperson said. The bill initially aimed to stop search engines from reproducing headlines and parts of news articles without the publishers consent, only allowing them to republish news snippets with permission or a paid license from the publishers. However, it was changed by a legislative committee earlier this week, making it unclear what its impact will be if it becomes law.

Printmaking, origami, and bookbinding sound like activities on the day's arts-and-crafts agenda at camp, not a developer conference. That is, unless you're Salesforce-owned app platform Heroku.

In a press conference on Friday, President Obama made reference to a "Jedi mind meld," effectively mixing up his sci-fi references. The internet, naturally, responded.

To help you click on links (and buy products associated with those links) Amazon has patented a system that pulls the pointer towards the link or button.

The Internet has been seen as a disruptor to the traditional TV industry, but a new report suggests that it's also where the industry's biggest growth lies.

Has Google's Chrome browser been crashing on you in recent weeks? If so, you're not alone.

In the ecosystem gamble of "open" or "closed," Ford is putting all its chips on open. At this week's Mobile World Congress, Ford announced it's releasing the proprietary source code for its Sync AppLink platform to Genivi, an automotive-centric open source alliance.

A Florida man deserved to be arrested inside the Supreme Court building last year for wearing a jacket painted with "Occupy Everything," and is lucky he was only apprehended on unlawful entry charges, the Department of Justice says.

Facebook invited the press to an event at its Menlo Park campus on March 7, where the company plans to show off a new look for its News Feed product.

Would you believe I end up being the PS4 optimist in this episode? It's true. Scary but true.

You better duck when Boston Dynamics' BigDog robot hurls a cinder block your way.

This week on the Gadget Lab Show, the gang checks out the Sony RX-1 camera and the V-Moda M-100 headphones.

Director Alex Winter's documentary

The W3C has put all the videos from its recent W3Conf online, offering web developers a treasure trove of tips, tricks and how-tos for using web standards.

Once al-Qaida turned airplanes into missiles. Now its tips for would-be jihadis run more toward vehicular vandalism.

A new paper suggests that researchers look to bird songs and monkey calls to understand how human language might have evolved from simpler, preexisting abilities.

It's the most widely used rendering engine on the web, but not every WebKit-based browser is the same and your website will not necessarily look the same in all of them. Google Chrome's Paul Irish offers developers an overview of what WebKit is and why not all "WebKits" are the same.

SpaceX successfully launched its third flight to the International Space Station this morning carrying more than 1,200 pounds of cargo as part of the company?s ongoing orbital trucking contract with NASA. This morning?s launch was the first daytime launch of the Falcon 9 from Cape Canaveral, with the liftoff taking place at 10:10 a.m. EST.

So The Maker Map, an open-source Google Map created by Renee DiResta and Nick Pinkston, tries to illuminate them all, dividing them by category and plotting them out.

All the handwringing by 7th-grade English teachers and parents over the tens of millions of grammatically challenged texts sent every day misses the point of what texting is: it's speech.

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) has formulated a policy that changes the relationship between the American public and the scientific enterprise. The premise is this: All federal agencies with at least $100 million in yearly research disbursements must ensure that peer-reviewed research articles be made freely available after a 12-month embargo period. But why have an embargo? Wired Science blogger Jeffrey Marlow explains.

Watch a live feed as SpaceX's Dragon capsule attempts to launch to the International Space Station bringing supplies and experiments. NASA's coverage starts at 5:30 a.m. PDT/8:30 a.m. EDT and, if all goes well, blast off is scheduled for 7:10 a.m. PDT/10:10 a.m EDT.

Could, as some have claimed, a pea-sized meteor actually be traveling 30,000 miles per hour when it hit the ground? Wired Science blogger Rhett Allain thinks not. Here's why.

The Pentagon's stealth fighters are back in the air. But the fundamental flaw that grounded the F-35 remains. Finicky motors are an inevitable side effect of the plane's design.

By encoding meaning instead of words, the Free Speech engine can easily render a given piece of information -- like a news article or school lesson -- into any language. Its developer, Indian programmer Ajit Narayanan, presented at the TED conference Thursday.

Do you have a Fitbit? Nike+ FuelBand? Maybe a Jawbone Up? Basis? Larklife? Withings tracker? The personal sensor revolution is upon us ? quite literally. There's been an explosion of devices meant to make quantified-selfing easier than ever. All of them promise to help you understand your health and even improve it. That first part? ...

When you use a web application, you leave your data at the mercy of the company who runs it. Usually, this isn't a problem, but not always. Last week, the web-based help desk application Zendesk was hacked, potentially exposing data from users of Twitter, Tumblr and Twitter, which all use the application for customer support.

Following

The very nature of how tech products are developed, especially software, fosters a corporate culture that lends itself to likability.

Since 2008, Lego has offered a way for these creators to have their designs turned into official Lego products and receive a royalty for their efforts, but thus far only four projects, including a Minecraft Microworld and a Back to the Future time machine, have gathered the 10,000 fan votes and passed the stringent commercialization review which are required to make a kit official.

Ben Woodworth was filming ice-climbing athletes in the Utah backcountry when he noticed enormous snowflakes falling on his backpack. The contrast of the white flakes against the bag's black material immediately caught his eye so he pulled out his iPhone 5 and a $5 macro attachment he ordered online.