Apple On The Cutting Edge

I read in interesting article today titled, “Apple cures the common cold and other stuff

Seth Weintraub of 9to5Mac, a blogger with good sources within the Macintosh community, is reporting that Apple has invented a new manufacturing process for MacBooks.

“It is totally revolutionary, a game changer. One of the biggest Apple innovations in a decade. The MacBook manufacturing process up to this point has been outsourced to Chinese or Taiwanese manufacturers like Foxconn. Now Apple is in charge. The company has spent the last few years building an entirely new manufacturing process that uses lasers and jets of water to carve the MacBooks out of a brick of aluminum. (Yes, this sounded a bit crazy to us as well. But our source is adamant so bear with us. He says Apple has built a manufacturing process that would make Henry Ford proud.)”

I found it interesting because people seem obsessed with every move that Apple makes, and for good reason. Apple has always made a dependable product, and reading this article just confirms that they are always trying to do more. Pretty soon they’ll be making a new improved electric blanket.

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Posted on October 5, 2008 Add a Comment
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T-Mobile Lost A Lot Of Information

This is the first I have heard of this, and being a former T-Mobile customer it makes me wonder… Why? Shouldn’t I have been informed of this breach before reading about at at Yahoo! News?

Europe’s leading telecommunications company, Deutsche Telekom, admitted Saturday that it has lost confidential data belonging to 17 million T-mobile clients.

The theft, in 2006, which is now subject to a judicial inquiry, involved telephone numbers, dates of birth, addresses and email addresses, subsidiary T-Mobile said in a statement.

Spokesman Frank Domagala said that bank details were not attached, and that “according to our information, even though these details have been put up for sale on the black market, there has not been a buyer.”

It’s not like they knew nothing about me, or I was buying landscape supplies or Moen faucets from them. They had all my personal information, and I think I had a right to know they lost it a long time ago.

Note: It was brought to my attention that the information which was lost by Deutsche Telekom does not include any U.S. customer data, as T-Mobile USA is a wholly owned subsidiary of DT, but maintains separate customer data. That’s good news, if you live in the U.S.

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Posted on October 5, 2008 Add a Comment
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Microsoft And The BailOut

Microsoft Corp., the world’s largest software maker, urged the House of Representatives to reconsider its vote against the $700 billion financial bailout plan Monday.

“Microsoft strongly urges members of the U.S. House of Representatives to reconsider and to support legislation that will re-instill confidence and stability in the financial markets,” Smith said in a statement. “This legislation is vitally important to the health and preservation of jobs in all sectors of the economy of Washington State and the nation, and we urge Congress to act swiftly.”

Hmm. I’m not so sure I trust Microsoft (as a company) trying to persuade politicians to change their minds. Where have I heard this before? I would suck at futures trading, because I never saw this coming. All I can do is turn the focus to those who know what they are talking about.

Oh well, it doesn’t matter, because I think Thaddeus McCotter said it best,

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Posted on September 29, 2008 Add a Comment
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Acquisitions Are Not Always Good

For the past seven years or so, I haven’t had any luck with McAfee applications.

Computer security company McAfee Inc (MFE.N) plans to buy Secure Computing Corp (SCUR.O) for $465 million, adding specialized equipment that keeps hackers from breaking into computer networks.

The move, McAfee’s biggest acquisition to date, helps the No. 2 computer security company expand the bundle of products it can sell to businesses. The deal also boosts the number of companies that use its products.

I used to run McAfee anti-virus and I always seemed to have issues. Then I ran AVG and it found hundreds of items that McAfee never found. I love running avg, whether it’s installed on my home servers, or on the memory cards I carry for work, it never fails. So, if this new acquisition means they will offer the same quality of service they offer with their anti-virus line, I’ll pass thank you very much.

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Posted on September 22, 2008 Add a Comment
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Best Buy Throws Away $121 Million

I am all for competition. Competition is good. Does Best Buy really think they are coing to compete with iTunes? Seriously?

Best Buy Co Inc plans to buy digital music service Napster Inc for $121 million in cash in an effort to compete with Apple’s dominant iTunes service and its iPod music players.

Best Buy, one of the largest retailers of CDs, and Napster, once the best known name in digital music, both offer digital subscription services, but neither have mounted much of a challenge to Apple, which holds more than 70 percent of the U.S. digital music market.

As the owner of an iPod Nano 3G, I cannot see myself every using Napster or best Buy or whatever they become once they are merged. Why would I? Hell, even if I fired up my Zen Jukebox, which I still do from time to time, I would use iTunes long before anything else.

How are all those other iTunes competitors doing anyway? Bueller? Bueller?

Yeah, got it. If Best Buy wants to keep tossing money away like that, they can feel free to toss a couple million my way. I bet I can make it last longer than the deal with Napster will. Once this deal goes through, they’ll find their company shrinking and it won’t be caused by weight loss diet pills. It’s a no-win situation for them, I believe.

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Posted on September 15, 2008 Add a Comment
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A Day Of Silence

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Posted on September 11, 2008 Add a Comment
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Shiny New Chrome Gets A Ding

I like the Chrome browser. It’s fast. It’s ridiculously fast. I don’t use it while finding items to blog about, or for anything else “productive”. But when I want to kick back and just surf the web, and look at promotional items, I have been testing Chrome.

Bach Khoa Internetwork Security, a security-research firm in Vietnam, claims to be the first to discover a critical vulnerability in Google’s Chrome browser.

“This is the first critical Chrome vulnerability permitting [a] hacker to perform a remote code-execution attack and take complete control of the affected system,” the firm wrote in its Sept. 5 advisory. While four Chrome vulnerabilities were discovered, Bach Khoa said the “Save As” flaw is the only one that can allow an attacker to launch remote attacks from a victim’s PC. Other vulnerabilities just crash the browser.

Thank goodness I don’t save anything while using Chrome, huh?

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Posted on September 8, 2008 Add a Comment
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Google Brings Chrome To The Table

Did you hear the news? Google is going to start offering their own web browser. Wow. Just what we need. Another browser. I can hear the web developers whining already. This doesn’t work, that doesn’t work. Browsers always have their own quirks.

Google Inc is set to introduce on Tuesday a new Web browser designed to more quickly handle video-rich or other complex Web programs, posing a challenge to browsers designed originally to handle text and graphics.

Google officials confirmed news of long-rumored plans to offer its own Web browsing software, entitled Google Chrome, in a company blog post after it mistakenly mailed details of the plan to a Google-watching blog, called Blogoscoped.com.

Of course, since it’s Google, everyone will bow down at their feet and accept their ‘Chrome’ browser, with no questions asked. Well, there might be one question.

Couldn’t they come up with a better name than ‘Chrome’? When I hear the name chrome, I think of old cars or online auto insurance quotes. And it isn’t chrome anyway. What gives?

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Posted on September 1, 2008 Add a Comment
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Comcast Capping Their Cable

I figured it was just a matter of time before some internet providers started capping their ‘unlimited’ data plans. I wonder how many customers actually exceed the 250 GB limit they want to impose?

Comcast has made it official: Home Internet service customers are limited to 250GB of data per month. According to the company, the move is in response to heavy usage by some customers that can cause network congestion.

They say that 1% of their customers will be affected. Comcast has 24 million customers. That means 240,000 people are ruining it for everyone else. I think they should run a contest and offer a couple free weeks at Mykonos villa rentals for everyone who doesn’t abuse the system. What on Earth takes so much bandwidth?

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Posted on August 31, 2008 Add a Comment
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Come September

I never leave my cellphone laying around. If I had an iPhone, you bet your ass I wouldn’t leave it laying around.

The latest iPhone embarrassment is a security hole that makes it simple to access stored data on supposedly locked iPhones. Apple said Thursday that a software patch to solve the problem is in the works.

They’re fixing the problem already? Wow, you mean iPhone users won’t have to wait for the first Tuesday in the month for a fix? Oh wait.

Apple spokesperson Jennifer Bowcock said, “The minor iPhone security issue which surfaced this week is fixed in a software update which will be released in September.”

That makes sense. Maybe this will teach people not to leave their phones laying around. Heck, if they can’t remember to keep their phones in their hands, imagine how many promotional pens get lost everyday!

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Posted on August 30, 2008 Add a Comment
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