After 128 years, new technology brings the great inventor’s voice back to life. [Read more]
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Alexander Graham Bell’s voice captured from old recordings
After 128 years, new technology brings the great inventor’s voice back to life. [Read more]
Read More:
Alexander Graham Bell’s voice captured from old recordings
Streaming service adds more than 3 million streaming subscribers around the world in the aftermath of the debut of its “House of Cards” miniseries. [Read more]
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Netflix shares explode as revenue tops $1 billion
The next iPad will be both thinner and lighter, according to an analyst with a very solid track record of Apple tea leaf reading. [Read more]
Continued here:
iPad 5 said to be 15 percent thinner, 25 percent lighter
Google’s online e-mail and file storage service are having some access problems, according to Google’s status page — and lots of frustrated users. [Read more]
Originally posted here:
Google Drive, Gmail hit by service disruptions
Microsoft may be moving toward bringing back the Start button and allowing users to boot straight to the desktop with its coming Windows 8.1 release later this year. [Read more]
Excerpt from:
Windows 8, take 2? Let’s see Start button, boot to desktop
concealment writes with news that a court battle has brought to light details on how the FBI’s “stingray” surveillance tool works, and how they used it with Verizon’s help to collect evidence about an alleged identity thief. Quoting: “Air cards are devices that plug into a computer and use the wireless cellular networks of phone providers to connect the computer to the internet. The devices are not phones and therefore don’t have the ability to receive incoming calls, but in this case Rigmaiden asserts that Verizon reconfigured his air card to respond to surreptitious voice calls from a landline controlled by the FBI. The FBI calls, which contacted the air card silently in the background, operated as pings to force the air card into revealing its location. In order to do this, Verizon reprogrammed the device so that when an incoming voice call arrived, the card would disconnect from any legitimate cell tower to which it was already connected, and send real-time cell-site location data to Verizon, which forwarded the data to the FBI. This allowed the FBI to position its stingray in the neighborhood where Rigmaiden resided. The stingray then “broadcast a very strong signal” to force the air card into connecting to it, instead of reconnecting to a legitimate cell tower, so that agents could then triangulate signals coming from the air card and zoom-in on Rigmaiden’s location. To make sure the air card connected to the FBI’s simulator, Rigmaiden says that Verizon altered his air card’s Preferred Roaming List so that it would accept the FBI’s stingray as a legitimate cell site and not a rogue site, and also changed a data table on the air card designating the priority of cell sites so that the FBI’s fake site was at the top of the list.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Continued here:
FBI’s Smartphone Surveillance Tool Explained In Court Battle
Even without a security suite, Windows 8 is safer than Windows 7. Adding just about any third-party security suite makes it even safer, a new study finds. [Read more]
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Windows 8’s rising security tide raises all antivirus boats
Internal document from the Drug Enforcement Administration complains that messages sent with Apple’s encrypted chat service are “impossible to intercept,” even with a warrant. [Read more]
Taken from:
Apple’s iMessage encryption trips up feds’ surveillance
Facebook’s News Feed is a great way to get just the highlights from your social networks, but it never shows you everything—just the stuff it thinks is important. If you want to avoid that and see everything your friends post, you can enable a comprehensive, chronological view with the new News Feed design. More »
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How to Bring Back Facebook’s “Most Recent” View in the New News Feed
The Internet phone and messaging service shares an impressive statistic and shows it remains a powerhouse when it comes to communications. [Read more]
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Skype handles 2 billion minutes of connections daily