Top Items:
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols / eWEEK.com:
Expert: Open XML Loses Standards Battle — Standards maven Andrew Updegrove predicts that the ISO will announce that Microsoft's Open XML failed to be voted in as a standard. — Standards expert and attorney Andrew Updegrove has predicted that on Sept. 4 the International Organization …
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Martin LaMonica / CNET News.com:
Microsoft stumbles in Open XML standards vote — Microsoft's effort to standardize its Open XML document formats through the "fast track" process at the International Organization for Standardization failed in a vote that ended over the weekend, according to people familiar with the voting.
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Macsimum News
PR Newswire:
Strong Global Support for Open XML as It Enters Final Phase of ISO Standards Process — Significant participation by National Bodies in ISO/IEC ratification process for Open XML; final decision expected in March 2008 at close of ballot resolution period. — REDMOND, Wash. …
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ConsortiumInfo.org …
Kevin J. O'Brien / New York Times:
Microsoft Favored to Win Open Document Vote — Amid intense lobbying, Microsoft is expected to squeak out a victory this week to have its open document format, Office Open XML, recognized as an international standard, people tracking the vote said Monday. — The move would help Microsoft …
Discussion:
Ed Brill
Yukari Iwatani Kane / Wall Street Journal:
Sony to Challenge Apple In TV, Movie Downloads — CEO Stringer Sees Video — As Key to Reclaiming — Title as No. 1 Innovator — TOKYO — Two years after taking the helm of Sony Corp., Chief Executive Howard Stringer is quietly preparing a big move to expand the company …
vnunet:
Radio iPods expected on Wednesday — New iPods designed to support digital radio — Apple is expected to launch a new range of iPods this week designed to receive digital radio. — The company will make an announcement about the new products on 5 September, but is remaining quiet about what changes will be made.
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Tom Krazit / CNET News.com:
The iPod is growing up — reporter's notebook If Apple …
The iPod is growing up — reporter's notebook If Apple …
Discussion:
dailywireless.org
Duncan Riley / TechCrunch:
Mozilla Revives Eudora...You Remember Eudora, Don't You? — Eudora, the email client that introduced many in the earlier days of the internet to email, officially died May 1, although not that many people noticed. Qualcomm decided to open source the Eudora code and the good folks at Mozilla …
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David Chartier / Ars Technica:
Mozilla keeps Eudora alive, releases new version based on Thunderbird
Mozilla keeps Eudora alive, releases new version based on Thunderbird
Discussion:
The Unofficial Apple Weblog
Pagan Kennedy / New York Times:
A Space for Us — I first ventured onto MySpace this winter. After a few minutes of exploring, I clicked into a profile posted by a girl smashed on vodka. Her photo showed her slumped across her desk, blond hair fanning over her laptop. Here's the most disturbing part of the story …
Gabriel Rivera / riverag.com:
The Word "LINUX" is inappropriate in XBOX Live — I love Linux and the XBOX 360, so yesterday I tried to include the word "LINUX" in the motto section on XBOX Live. I was stunned when I got a message saying "Your motto contains inappropriate language. Please try again".
Natasha Lomas / CNET News.com:
Chinese airline opts for in-flight mobile service — China's Shenzhen Airlines has fitted its planes with communications technology that will allow passengers to use their mobile phones to make voice calls and send email and SMS messages during flights. — The OnAir service is set …
Financial Times:
Chinese military hacked into Pentagon — By Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington and Richard McGregor in Beijing — The Chinese military hacked into a Pentagon computer network in June in the most successful cyber attack on the US defence department, say American officials.
Discussion:
The Register, DailyTech, GigaOM, Ars Technica, Mashable!, Threat Chaos, Boing Boing and Digg
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Stephen Shankland / CNET News.com:
Geotagging links photos to locales — An array of maturing technologies is poised to add a new dimension—geography—to the digital photography revolution. — Today, people can retrieve digital photos based on the time they were taken. A nascent technology called geotagging, though …
Dionne Searcey / Wall Street Journal:
Keeping Junior on a Wireless Leash — Parents Gain More Options — To Limit Kids' Cellphone Use; — AT&T Raises Bar on Controls — Parents are accustomed to setting up filters on their kids' computers that bar certain Web sites and blocking adult-themed channels on their televisions.
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p2pnet
John Ribeiro / Computerworld:
Indian bank site back online after malware attack — On blocks since Friday after compromise and infections discovered — The Web site of Bank of India, one of India's leading banks, was restored early Tuesday. The bank has closed the site on Friday after it found that the site had been hacked and was dispensing malicious code.
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SunbeltBLOG
Nicholas Deleon / CrunchGear:
New iPod Tomorrow, September 5: What Else Happened That Day? — Everyone expects Apple to release some sort of iPod tomorrow—be it that fat nano or what's commonly referred to as "an iPhone without the phone part." Since September 5 will (maybe) live forever in Apple fanboi history …
Discussion:
Apple 2.0
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Germany to join US in using "policeware" for espionage, investigations — A scandal is brewing in Germany and elsewhere as revelations spread that the German government plans to use trojans and other forms of malware (so-called "policeware") to spy on and track persons of interest.
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TeleRead