Goldman Sachs Demands Google Unsend One of Its E-mails

rudy_wayne (414635) writes A Goldman Sachs contractor was testing internal changes made to Goldman Sachs system and prepared a report with sensitive client information, including details on brokerage accounts. The report was accidentally e-mailed to a ‘gmail.com’ address rather than the correct ‘gs.com’ address. Google told Goldman Sachs on June 26 that it couldn’t just reach into Gmail and delete the e-mail without a court order. Goldman Sachs filed with the New York Supreme Court, requesting “emergency relief” to avoid a privacy violation and “avoid the risk of unnecessary reputational damage to Goldman Sachs.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Goldman Sachs Demands Google Unsend One of Its E-mails

Endurance Experiment Writes One Petabyte To Six Consumer SSDs

crookedvulture (1866146) writes “Last year, we kicked off an SSD endurance experiment to see how much data could be written to six consumer drives. One petabyte later, half of them are still going. Their performance hasn’t really suffered, either. The casualties slowed down a little toward the very end, and they died in different ways. The Intel 335 Series and Kingston HyperX 3K provided plenty of warning of their imminent demise, though both still ended up completely unresponsive at the very end. The Samsung 840 Series, which uses more fragile TLC NAND, perished unexpectedly. It also suffered a rash of cell failures and multiple bouts of uncorrectable errors during its life. While the sample size is far too small to draw any definitive conclusions, all six SSDs exceeded their rated lifespans by hundreds of terabytes. The fact that all of them wrote over 700TB is a testament to the endurance of modern SSDs.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Endurance Experiment Writes One Petabyte To Six Consumer SSDs

​1PasswordAnywhere Lets You Access Your 1Password Vault on The Web

1Password is one of our favorite password managers , and it can sync to all your devices via Dropbox. Once you sync your vault of passwords, 1Password actually lets you access them on any device—without installing the app. Read more…

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​1PasswordAnywhere Lets You Access Your 1Password Vault on The Web

Apache OpenOffice Reaches 100 Million Downloads. Now What?

We’re thankfully long past the days when an emailed Word document was useless without a copy of Microsoft Word, and that’s in large part thanks to the success of the OpenOffice family of word processors. “Family, ” because the OpenOffice name has been attached to several branches of a codebase that’s gone through some serious evolution over the years, starting from its roots in closed-source StarOffice, acquired and open-sourced by Sun to become OpenOffice.org. The same software has led (via some hamfisted moves by Oracle after its acquisition of Sun) to the also-excellent LibreOffice. OpenOffice.org’s direct descendant is Apache OpenOffice, and an anonymous reader writes with this excellent news from that project: “The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the all-volunteer developers, stewards, and incubators of more than 170 Open Source projects and initiatives, announced today that Apache OpenOffice has been downloaded 100 million times. Over 100 million downloads, over 750 extensions, over 2, 800 templates. But what does the community at Apache need to do to get the next 100 million?” If you want to play along, you can get the latest version of OpenOffice from SourceForge (Slashdot’s corporate cousin). I wonder how many government offices — the U.S. Federal government has long been Microsoft’s biggest customer — couldn’t get along just fine with an open source word processor, even considering all the proprietary-format documents they’re stuck with for now. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apache OpenOffice Reaches 100 Million Downloads. Now What?

$499 3-D Printer Drew Plenty of Attention at CES (Video)

3-D printing is far from new, but a $499 3-D printer is new enough to get a bunch of people to write about it, including someone whose headline read, CES 2014: Could 3D printing change the world? XYZPrinting, the company behind the da Vinci 1.0 printer, has some happy-looking executives in the wake of CES. They won an award, and their booth got lots of attention. This is what trade shows are all about for small and/or new companies. Now the XYZ Printing people can go home and pump out some product — assuming they got a lot of orders (and not just attention) at CES. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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$499 3-D Printer Drew Plenty of Attention at CES (Video)

Outlook.com’s latest move to win over Gmail users is an easy, one-step importer that copies over you

Outlook.com’s latest move to win over Gmail users is an easy, one-step importer that copies over your Gmail messages with labels, read status and conversation structure intact. The feature is new today, with a gradual rollout to all Outlook users. [ Outlook Blog via Engadget ] Read more…        

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Outlook.com’s latest move to win over Gmail users is an easy, one-step importer that copies over you

The Case Against Gmail

stry_cat writes “Ed Bot makes the case against Gmail: ‘Gmail was a breath of fresh air when it debuted. But this onetime alternative is showing signs that it’s past its prime, especially if you want to use the service with a third-party client. That’s the way Google wants it, which is why I’ve given up on Gmail after almost a decade.’ Personally, I’ve always thought it odd that no other email provider ever adopted Gmails “search not sort” mentality. I’ve been a Gmail user since you needed an invitation to get an account. However Gmail has been steadily moving towards a more traditional email experience. Plus there’s the iGoogle disaster that got me looking into alternatives to everything Google.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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The Case Against Gmail

Microsoft launched Skype for Outlook.com today, bringing voice calls, video calls, and messaging to

Microsoft launched Skype for Outlook.com today, bringing voice calls, video calls, and messaging to its email service. Users just need to link their Outlook.com account with Skype and install a plug-in for Chrome, Firefox, or Internet Explorer to enable the integration. Read more here . Read more…        

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Microsoft launched Skype for Outlook.com today, bringing voice calls, video calls, and messaging to

Microsoft has released an Outlook app for iPhone and for iPad, called OWA (Office Web App).

Microsoft has released an Outlook app for iPhone and for iPad , called OWA (Office Web App). It makes the version of Outlook available with an Office 365 subscription (note: not the free Outlook.com service) and wraps it into a touch- and swipe-friendly iOS app. Office 365 is required. See more details on the Office blog . Read more…        

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Microsoft has released an Outlook app for iPhone and for iPad, called OWA (Office Web App).