Asian Call Center Workers Trained With US Tax Dollars

gManZboy writes in with a troubling story about tax dollars being used for overseas call center training. “Despite President Obama’s recent call for companies to ‘insource’ jobs sent overseas, it turns out that the federal government itself is spending millions of dollars to train foreign students for employment in some booming career fields–including working in offshore call centers that serve U.S. businesses. The program is called JEEP, which stands for Job Enabling English Proficiency. It’s available to college students in the Philippines through USAID. That’s the same agency that until a couple of years ago was spending millions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer money to train offshore IT workers in Sri Lanka. Congressman Tim Bishop (D-New York), told about the program on Tuesday, called it ‘surprising and distressing.’ Bishop recently introduced a bill that would make companies that outsource call centers ineligible for government contracts.”


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Amazon's Cloud Now 1% of Internet Traffic

An anonymous reader writes “A Wired story claims Amazon’s cloud now hosts enough companies and traffic to generate 1% of all Internet traffic (and visits from 1/3 of daily Internet users). An amazing number if its true. And a little scary for one company to host this much cloud infrastructure.”


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Handmade particle accelerator unveiled at Milan Design Week, Higgs-Boson a no-show

Handmade particle accelerator unveiled in Milan, Higgs-Boson a no-show

When it comes to particle science, it’s not all about huge winding tunnels and god particles. Super/collider, a group that aims to promote science through eye-catching creative methods, teamed up with designer Patrick Stevenson-Keating to craft this relatively simple — but working– particle accelerator for Milan Design week. The setup involves several hand-blown bulbs, with a vacuum inside them allowing electrons to rocket from side to side, lit in a purple haze thanks to a phosphorous screen at one end. The whole thing is fashioned from the relatively commonplace gear you see above, although a how-to guide still remains unfortunately non-existent.

Handmade particle accelerator unveiled at Milan Design Week, Higgs-Boson a no-show originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Apr 2012 14:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Handmade particle accelerator unveiled at Milan Design Week, Higgs-Boson a no-show

Hacking Wi-Fi Routers to Bring Voice and Data to Rural Communities

villagetelco2.png

VIllage Telco’s Mesh Potato, which retails for $119 and provides both data and voice services via wifi to communities with limited internet and mobile phone access.

The statistics, by now, are familiar to those of us following technology in the developing world. A recent article in The Economist looks at Africa’s booming economy, identifying mobile phones as one of the major drivers behind the continent’s growth: “Mobile phones have penetrated deep into the bush. More than 600m Africans have one; perhaps 10% of those have access to mobile-internet services. The phones make boons like savings accounts and information on crop prices ever more available.”

But as a continent of over a billion people, that means some 400 million—twice the population of Brazil—still do not have access to mobile communications. And even fewer have access to the Internet. Those who do have access to a phone spend more than half of their disposable income just to stay connected. At the same time, building a tower to cover many parts of Africa can be a challenge, both because of the costs of the tower and the lack of access to available radio bandwidth.

In comes Village Telco, an organization working on technology to leap past these challenges and offer a low cost communications option for Africans in rural areas. “It caught me by surprise,” founder Steve Song told Core77, as he referred to the “incredible pace and change of mobile technology.”

villagetelco3.jpgAn early prototype of the Mesh Potato. Image courtesy the Shuttleworth Foundation on a Creative Commons License.

Recognizing the growing need for voice and data services for all citizens across the continent, Song, based in Cape Town, set out to find a solution to the challenges of accessible connectivity. He had been following wireless hacker movement who had discovered that Linksys routers were built on open-source software and that a wave guide antenna could be built using a soup can—”a cantenna,” he told me—that would distribute a broadband signal several kilometers away.

Based on this technology, Village Telco developed the “Mesh Potato,” a wi-fi router adapted to connect with other devices like it and distribute wi-fi over large areas at low cost. It’s the same basic principle that allows an Apple Airport Express to extend a wi-fi signal around your home. When deployed in a place like Bo-kaap, South Africa, a community on a hill, four of these devices serve as a backbone network, while dozens more placed on individual rooftops extend the network.

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Around 140,000 Apple machines still infected with Flashback malware, says Symantec

Around 140,000 Apple machines still infected with Flashback malware, says Symantec

By now, we’re all quite familiar with the Java-driven trojan that’s affected thousands of Apple’s rigs, and while the numbers seem to have drastically dropped since the first Cupertino fix, there’s still a plethora of machines carrying the bug. According to Symantec, the number of infected computers is now at around 140,000, seeing a decline of over 460,000 since April 9th. Still, the security outfit remains puzzled by the fact, as it expected the digits to be somewhere near the 99,000 mark by now. Perhaps this is due to some folks not even being aware of Flashback’s existence, or maybe not checking for software updates as often as most of us. Either way, we hope you’ve already used one of the tools Apple handed you.

Around 140,000 Apple machines still infected with Flashback malware, says Symantec originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Apr 2012 07:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Around 140,000 Apple machines still infected with Flashback malware, says Symantec

Windows Phone 8 reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones (updated)

nokia windows phone

We’ve heard it rumored, but this is as close to an official confirmation as we’ve seen. Windows Phone 8, affectionately known as Apollo ’round these parts, will reportedly be available on every single Windows Phone device to ever ship. Let that sink in a second. Now that you’ve been appropriately wowed, we’ll point you to the video just after the break, which shows a Microsoft spokesperson affirming that “all” devices — including those first-generation handsets from LG and Samsung — will be included in the WP8 rollout. No details regarding timing were revealed — and it remains to be seen if this will prove true in the States, where carriers have just as much say on updates as the OEMs — but you can consider us cautiously optimistic in the meantime.

Update: Hard to say if wires have been crossed, but The Verge is reporting that while apps are included in the upgrade path, the spokesperson here may have been incorrect in his assumptions that devices will be upgraded in due time. At this point, we’re left to wait for Microsoft to clear things up. So, Microsoft — care to clarify?

Continue reading Windows Phone 8 reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones (updated)

Windows Phone 8 reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones (updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Apr 2012 19:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone 8 reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones (updated)

Windows Phone 8 (Apollo) reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones

nokia windows phone

We’ve heard it rumored, but this is as close to an official confirmation as we’ve seen. Windows Phone 8, affectionately known as Apollo ’round these parts, will reportedly be available on every single Windows Phone device to ever ship. Let that sink in a second. Now that you’ve been appropriately wowed, we’ll point you to the video just after the break, which shows a Microsoft spokesperson affirming that “all” devices — including those first-generation handsets from LG and Samsung — will be included in the WP8 rollout. No details regarding timing were revealed — and it remains to be seen if this will prove true in the States, where carriers have just as much say on updates as the OEMs — but you can consider us cautiously optimistic in the meantime.

Continue reading Windows Phone 8 (Apollo) reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones

Windows Phone 8 (Apollo) reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Apr 2012 19:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Phone 8 (Apollo) reportedly coming to ‘all’ WP smartphones

Microsoft gives Windows Server “8” an official name, ships System Center 2012



At the Microsoft Management Summit today in Las Vegas, Microsoft officially announced that the next version of Windows Server, previously code-named Windows Server “8,” will officially be named Windows Server 2012—and will be released this calendar year.

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Microsoft gives Windows Server “8” an official name, ships System Center 2012

3D technology coming to an iPhone near you—but to what end?



It’s only a matter of time now before we each have our own Holographic Tupac projected in 3D out of our iPhones. Right? Okay, it might be a while before the late rapper becomes my own 3D virtual assistant, but Apple has indirectly revealed that it is working on something related to 3D technology.

In a job posting for an iOS Software Engineer (hat tip 9to5 Mac), the company wrote that it is looking for a “Computer Vision specialist to strengthen its multi-view stereo research group.” The person must have experience dealing with 3D geometry, multiview stereo and 3D construction, mesh texturing techniques, and cameras and surfaces in a 3D environment, among other things.

It has been years since we last wrote about Apple job listings, mostly because they are relatively benign and tend to involve technologies that we won’t have in our hands for years to come. This one, however, piqued our interest because of the obvious interest in 3D technology; Apple doesn’t currently offer any products that make clear use of 3D, especially involving iOS. Several Android products have begun to dabble in 3D, however, such as the G-Slate with 3D, HTC Evo 3D, and the LG Optimus 3D. As such, it’s not a reach that Apple is working on its own 3D implementation, but what the end result will be is anyone’s guess at this point.

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3D technology coming to an iPhone near you—but to what end?