Mac
Firefox 3.5 Almost Here
Fans of Firefox’s beta builds can now download Firefox 3.5 Release Candidate 2 for Windows, Mac, and Linux. The latest build contains bug-fixes although, according to Mozilla’s Director of Firefox Mike Beltzner, these were minor stability issues corrected after the release of the first release candidate.
SLI On Life Support For the AMD Platform
JoshMST writes “For years AMD and NVIDIA were like peas and carrots, and their SNAP partnership proved to be quite successful for both companies. Things changed dramatically when AMD bought up ATI, and now it seems like NVIDIA is pulling the plug on SLI support for the AMD platform. While the chipset division at AMD may be a bitter rival to NVIDIA, the CPU guys there have had a long and prosperous relationship with the Green Machine. While declining chipset margins on the AMD side was attributed to AMD’s lackluster processor offerings for the past several years, the Phenom II chips have reawakened interest in the platform and they have found a place in enthusiasts’ hearts again. Unfortunately for NVIDIA, they are seemingly missing out on a significant revenue stream by not offering new chipsets to go with these processors. They have also curtailed SLI adoption on the AMD platform as well, which couldn’t be happening at a worse time.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
FCC To Probe Exclusive Mobile Deals
On Tuesday, we discussed news that four US Senators would be looking into the exclusivity deals between carriers and cell phone makers. Apparently, they didn’t like what they heard. Reader Ian Lamont writes with an update: “The Federal Communications Commission is planning on launching an investigation into exclusive handset deals between mobile carriers and handset makers. In a speech on Thursday, acting FCC Chairman Michael Copps said the agency ’should determine whether some of these arrangements adversely restrict consumer choice or harm the development of innovative devices, and it should take appropriate action if it finds harm.’ It’s not hard to imagine who might be targeted — at a separate Senate Committee on Commerce hearing on Thursday, much of the discussion centered on AT&T’s exclusive deal to carry the iPhone. AT&T claimed ‘consumers benefit from exclusive deals in three ways: innovation, lower cost and more choice,’ but carriers and senators from states with large rural populations disagreed, saying that their customers had no choice when it came to the iPhone — it’s not available because AT&Ts network doesn’t reach these areas. One panelist also brought up the Carterfone precedent (PDF), which concerned an ‘electrical acoustic coupling device’ that a man named Tom Carter developed in the 1950s to let field workers make phone calls using a radio transceiver connected to AT&T’s phone network. AT&T, which was then a monopoly, claimed no foreign devices could be connected to its network, but lost when it challenged the Carterfone in court. The result spurred innovation such as the fax machine.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
FCC To Probe Exclusive Mobile Deals
On Tuesday, we discussed news that four US Senators would be looking into the exclusivity deals between carriers and cell phone makers. Apparently, they didn’t like what they heard. Reader Ian Lamont writes with an update: “The Federal Communications Commission is planning on launching an investigation into exclusive handset deals between mobile carriers and handset makers. In a speech on Thursday, acting FCC Chairman Michael Copps said the agency ’should determine whether some of these arrangements adversely restrict consumer choice or harm the development of innovative devices, and it should take appropriate action if it finds harm.’ It’s not hard to imagine who might be targeted — at a separate Senate Committee on Commerce hearing on Thursday, much of the discussion centered on AT&T’s exclusive deal to carry the iPhone. AT&T claimed ‘consumers benefit from exclusive deals in three ways: innovation, lower cost and more choice,’ but carriers and senators from states with large rural populations disagreed, saying that their customers had no choice when it came to the iPhone — it’s not available because AT&Ts network doesn’t reach these areas. One panelist also brought up the Carterfone precedent (PDF), which concerned an ‘electrical acoustic coupling device’ that a man named Tom Carter developed in the 1950s to let field workers make phone calls using a radio transceiver connected to AT&T’s phone network. AT&T, which was then a monopoly, claimed no foreign devices could be connected to its network, but lost when it challenged the Carterfone in court. The result spurred innovation such as the fax machine.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Attack On a Significant Flaw In Apache Released
Zerimar points out that a significant flaw in Apache that can lead to a fairly trivial DoS attack is in the wild. Apache 1.x, 2.x, dhttpd, GoAhead WebServer, and Squid are confirmed vulnerable, while IIS6.0, IIS7.0, and lighttpd are confirmed not vulnerable. As of this writing, Apache Foundation does not have a patch available. From Rsnake’s introduction to the attack tool: “In considering the ramifications of a slow denial of service attack against particular services, rather than flooding networks, a concept emerged that would allow a single machine to take down another machine’s web server with minimal bandwidth and side effects on unrelated services and ports. The ideal situation for many denial of service attacks is where all other services remain intact but the webserver itself is completely inaccessible. Slowloris was born from this concept, and is therefore relatively very stealthy compared to most flooding tools.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Major Scene MP3 Pre-Release Group Busted By Police
A major online warez release group has been severely disrupted after a police and music industry investigation. A contender for the most prolific in its field, the group has suffered arrests, with the latest coming yesterday after police and the BPI conducted an early morning raid.
Why Did Apple Limit The MacPro’s Drive I/O?
Apple’s new MacBook Pro has a hard drive interface half the speed of the previous model, which will limit solid state drive performance as well potentially affect any external drives attached to the laptop.
Opera Unite is a Hail Mary
snydeq writes “Rather than view it as a game-changer, Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister sees Opera Unite as a Hail Mary bid for Opera to stay in the game. After all, in an era when even vending machines have Web servers on them, a Web server on the Web browser isn’t really that groundbreaking. What Opera is attempting is to ‘reintermediate’ the Internet — ‘directly linking people’s personal computers together’ by making them sign up for an account on Opera’s servers and ensuring all of their exchanges pass through Opera’s servers first. ‘That’s an effective way to get around technical difficulties like NAT firewalls, but more important, it makes Opera the intermediary in your social interactions — not Facebook, not MySpace, but Opera,’ McAllister writes. In other words, Opera hopes to use social networking as a Trojan horse to put traditional apps back in charge.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Opera Unite is a Hail Mary
snydeq writes “Rather than view it as a game-changer, Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister sees Opera Unite as a Hail Mary bid for Opera to stay in the game. After all, in an era when even vending machines have Web servers on them, a Web server on the Web browser isn’t really that groundbreaking. What Opera is attempting is to ‘reintermediate’ the Internet — ‘directly linking people’s personal computers together’ by making them sign up for an account on Opera’s servers and ensuring all of their exchanges pass through Opera’s servers first. ‘That’s an effective way to get around technical difficulties like NAT firewalls, but more important, it makes Opera the intermediary in your social interactions — not Facebook, not MySpace, but Opera,’ McAllister writes. In other words, Opera hopes to use social networking as a Trojan horse to put traditional apps back in charge.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Opera Unite is a Hail Mary
snydeq writes “Rather than view it as a game-changer, Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister sees Opera Unite as a Hail Mary bid for Opera to stay in the game. After all, in an era when even vending machines have Web servers on them, a Web server on the Web browser isn’t really that groundbreaking. What Opera is attempting is to ‘reintermediate’ the Internet — ‘directly linking people’s personal computers together’ by making them sign up for an account on Opera’s servers and ensuring all of their exchanges pass through Opera’s servers first. ‘That’s an effective way to get around technical difficulties like NAT firewalls, but more important, it makes Opera the intermediary in your social interactions — not Facebook, not MySpace, but Opera,’ McAllister writes. In other words, Opera hopes to use social networking as a Trojan horse to put traditional apps back in charge.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.