By now, we all know that Mars was once home to water and may have even supported life . But what would the planet have looked like when it was lush and verdant? More » 
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How Mars May Have Looked if It Was Covered in Water
			
			
 By now, we all know that Mars was once home to water and may have even supported life . But what would the planet have looked like when it was lush and verdant? More » 
Excerpt from:
How Mars May Have Looked if It Was Covered in Water
			
			
 Earlier today it was announced that the geniuses at Intel™ are poised to  blow up the cable industry  with their own set-top box and an unbundled cable service.  What has cable TV lovers foaming at the mouth is the fact that the Intel™ IPTV box will allow anyone with access to internet to subscribe to whatever cable channels they like — free from the traditional “bundling” packages which typically saddle customers with 5 channels they love and 195 they never watch at all. Forbes reports: “ Apple  and  Google  have been attempting for years to entice customers to ditch cable television for set top boxes that deliver TV shows, movies and more via the internet. For the past year or so,  Intel™  has also quietly been working on a top-secret set-top box that could not only be better than what Apple, Google, and even  Microsoft  offer today, but also kill the cable industry as we know it … This set-top box, said by industry insiders to be available to a limited beta of customers in March, will offer cable channels delivered “over the top” to televisions anywhere there is an Internet connection regardless of provider. ( Microsoft  Mediaroom, for example, requires  AT&T ’s service, and  Xbox ™ has limited offerings for  Comcast  and FiOS customers). For the first time, consumers will be able to subscribe to content per channel, unlike bundled cable services, and you may also be able to subscribe per show as well. Intel’s set-top box will also have access to Intel’s already existing app marketplace for apps, casual games, and video on demand. Leveraging the speed of current broadband, and the vast shared resources of the cloud, Intel plans to give customers the ability to use “Cloud DVR”, a feature intended to allow users to watch any past TV show at any time, without the need to record it ahead of time, pause live tv, and rewind shows in progress. “ To find out why this is such a big deal — including the hugely expensive deals Intel™ has been secretly lining up with Hollywood execs in order to pull this off, and why it this is so much more significant than anything Apple or Google would ever be able to pull off on their own — you can read the full story by visiting Forbes.com . SEE ALSO:   Intel™ Developing Bacteria Hard Drive With Near Infinite Storage Capacity SEE ALSO:   Glass Warfare: Apple Filed This Patent In The Summer That Will Soon Cannibalize iPhones, Siri & iPads Source: Forbes via Business Insider 
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The Holy Grail Of TV: Intel™ Is About To Destroy The Traditional Cable Model With Its Magic IPTV Box
			
			
 We’ve just seen an update to Firefox for Android , but that’s not the only revision that Mozilla has had in the works. Today also sees the release of version 17 of the desktop browser, which brings with it a number of changes and one noticeable omission. The latter is a lack of support for Mac OS X 10.5 (a.k.a. Leopard), which Mozilla first announced last month — those on Leopard can of course continue to use Firefox 16, they just won’t receive any updates. Otherwise, you can expect a new “Awesome Bar” with larger icons, more than 20 promised performance improvements and a new click-to-play functionality for dealing with outdated or potentially vulnerable plug-ins. Also receiving the bump to version 17 is the Extended Support Release (or ESR) version of the browser, which disables the automatic updating to cause less headaches for those dealing with mass deployments. You can find the full change log at the source link below. Update: As TechCrunch notes , version 17 also adds the new Social API to Firefox, although Facebook is the only site to take advantage of it so far — it now lets you add Messenger to the browser’s sidebar. Filed under: Internet , Software Comments Via: WinBeta Source: Mozilla 
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Firefox 17 heads out of beta, officially drops support for OS X 10.5
 An anonymous reader writes “Security firm Kaspersky has released its latest IT Threat Evolution report. There were some interesting findings in the report, as always, but the most interesting thing that stuck out was all the way at the bottom: ‘Microsoft products no longer feature among the Top 10 products with vulnerabilities. This is because the automatic updates mechanism has now been well developed in recent versions of Windows OS.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot. 
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Microsoft Escapes Kaspersky's Top 10 Vulnerabilities List