For every flaw in Apple’s iPad, there’s a fix just waiting to be found.
Now, I’m not talking about problems like those Wi-Fi woes that plagued people during the iPad’s early days; Apple itself offered up a solution there. I’m talking about the iPad’s most central limitations — the common functions that, for whatever reason, Apple decided not to address.
[…]
One of the most common complaints: The iPad doesn’t connect to much, and that makes printing a serious challenge.But fear not, Apple fanatics: The answer has arrived.
Ever since Google disclosed in January that Internet intruders had stolen information from its computers, the exact nature and extent of the theft has been a closely guarded company secret. But a person with direct knowledge of the investigation now says that the losses included one of Google’s crown jewels, a password system that controls access by millions of users worldwide to almost all of the company’s Web services, including e-mail and business applications.
The program, code named Gaia for the Greek goddess of the earth, was attacked in a lightning raid taking less than two days last December, the person said. Described publicly only once at a technical conference four years ago, the software is intended to enable users and employees to sign in with their password just once to operate a range of services.
Oops!
Found by Veronica Belmont.

- IPhone version 2, reviewed. Looks like a winner. Phone found in a bar. Har!
- Apple iPad shortages continue.
- Space Shuttle wants to land, but weather says no.
- New Incredible phone? Called the Incredible. Huh?
- Cisco supposedly releases a protocol to Open Source.
- Palm falling apart.
- Dell pad getting closer to release.
- 4G iPad coming from Sprint? Kinda.
- LCD’s now selling like crazy.
Go to www.eharmony.com
and use the code EHTECH for a great discount.
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You are looking at Apple’s next iPhone. It was found lost in a bar in Redwood City, camouflaged to look like an iPhone 3GS. We got it. We disassembled it. It’s the real thing, and here are all the details. Why we think it’s definitely real.
We’re as skeptical—if not more—than all of you. We get false tips all the time. But after playing with it for about a week—the overall quality feels exactly like a finished final Apple phone—and disassembling this unit, there is so much evidence stacked in its favor, that there’s very little possibility that it’s a fake. In fact, the possibility is almost none. Imagine someone having to use Apple components to design a functioning phone, from scratch, and then disseminating it to people around the world. Pretty much impossible.
….
It has been reported lost
Apple-connected John Gruber—from Daring Fireball—says that Apple has indeed lost a prototype iPhone and they want it back:
Yawn!
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A senior Iranian cleric says women who wear revealing clothing and behave promiscuously are to blame for earthquakes.
‘Many women who do not dress modestly … lead young men astray, corrupt their chastity and spread adultery in society, which (consequently) increases earthquakes,’ Hojatoleslam Kazem Sedighi was quoted as saying by Iranian media. Women in the Islamic Republic are required by law to cover from head to toe, but many, especially the young, ignore some of the more strict codes and wear tight coats and scarves pulled back that show much of the hair. ‘What can we do to avoid being buried under the rubble?’ Sedighi asked during a prayer sermon Friday. ‘There is no other solution but to take refuge in religion and to adapt our lives to Islam’s moral codes.’
Seismologists have warned for at least two decades that it is likely the sprawling capital will be struck by a catastrophic quake in the near future.
Iran is one of the world’s most earthquake-prone countries, and the cleric’s unusual explanation for why the earth shakes follows a prediction by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that a quake is certain to hit Tehran and that many of its 12 million inhabitants should relocate.
Some experts have even suggested Iran should move its capital to a less seismically active location. Tehran straddles scores of fault lines, including one more than 50 miles (80 kilometres) long, though it has not suffered a major quake since 1830.
Phew! Glad that’s cleared up.

“There is nothing so bad that politics cannot make it worse.”
–Thomas Sowell
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid recently declared that Democrats would take up immigration reform “this year,” defying the conventional wisdom that the issue is too perilous for the party to push during an election year. But maybe it’s Republicans who should be nervous—because a high-octane immigration fight could drive a wedge between the Republican Party and the Tea Party right.

Tonight, the 15th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow will air, for the first time ever, audiotapes of Timothy McVeigh giving his own account of why he detonated a truck filled with explosives in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. It was our country’s most destructive and deadly act of terrorism on U.S. soil prior to September 11. The bombing murdered 168 people, including more than two dozen children under the age of 6. More than 800 people were injured; damage was estimated at $652 million. Yet, McVeigh’s recorded voice, as if speaking from the grave almost nine years after his execution, says, “I feel no shame for it.”
Maddow has said the program is designed to put antigovernment extremism in perspective. “It doesn’t have to lead to violence, but it can and it has,” says Maddow in promotional spots. “We ignore this, our own very recent history of antigovernment violence and the dangers of domestic terrorism, at our peril.” According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, the number of antigovernment extremist groups spiked from 149 in 2008 to 512 (127 of them militias) in 2009…
Attorney Beth Wilkinson was the prosecutor who argued for the death penalty for McVeigh. “Obviously I am gratified to know he’ll be admitting to what he was convicted of,” says Wilkinson. “That said,” she adds, “I find it disturbing that these tapes will be played at such length, giving him—once again—a platform.” She hopes that the two-hour segment will provide a perspective on extremism, not just McVeigh’s…

What’s the line from the Tommy song, “Feel me, touch me…”
Beauty may be only skin deep, but for humanoid robots a fleshy covering is about more than mere aesthetics, it could be essential to making them socially acceptable. A touch-sensitive coating could prevent such machines from accidentally injuring anybody within their reach.
In May, a team at the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Genoa will dispatch to labs across Europe the first pieces of touch-sensing skin designed for their nascent humanoid robot, the iCub. The skin IIT and its partners have developed contains flexible pressure sensors that aim to put robots in touch with the world.
“Skin has been one of the big missing technologies for humanoid robots,” says roboticist Giorgio Metta at IIT. One goal of making robots in a humanoid form is to let them interact closely with people. But that will only be possible if a robot is fully aware of what its powerful motorised limbs are in contact with. […It] must be resilient, able to cover a large surface area and be able to detect even light touches anywhere on that surface. “Many of these factors conflict with each other,” he says.
The iCub is a humanoid robot the size of a child of three-and-a-half years old. Funded by the European Commission, it was designed to investigate cognition and how awareness of our limbs, muscles, tendons and tactile environment fuels the development of intelligence. The iCub’s technical specifications are open-source and some 15 labs across Europe have already “cloned” their own, so IIT’s skin design could find plenty of robots to enwrap.
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This Episode’s Executive Producers: Werner Flipsen, AJ Tissier, Matthew Hocking Listen to show by clicking ► Direct link to show. |

Disclaimer: ‘Viewing in 3D may cause disorientation for some viewers. Accordingly, DO NOT place your television near open stairwells, cables, balconies or other objects that can be tripped over, run into, knocked down, broken or fallen over.’
The world’s biggest electronics company has issued an extraordinary health warning about the dangers of watching 3D television. Pregnant women, the elderly, children and those suffering from serious medical conditions are among a wide range of people said to be at risk.
The alert extends to those who have been sleep deprived or drinking. It highlights alarming side effects such as confusion, nausea, convulsions, altered vision, light-headedness, dizziness, and involuntary movements such as eye or muscle twitching and cramps. Samsung says there are also concerns that those with epilepsy could be at risk of fits – as they are from strobe lighting and photographers’ flashes on normal television.
Watching 3D on TV, which involves wearing special glasses like those used for 3D movies, bombards the eyes and brain with a succession of flashing images that appear for a fraction of a second. It is a new way of seeing things and so puts unusual strain on the body. The warning has been posted on a Samsung website and appears designed to protect the manufacturer from any legal claims for compensation if people fall ill.
However, the language could seriously damage the launch of 3D, which is being pushed heavily by manufacturers and broadcasters as a breakthrough. One internet blogger wrote: ‘I’m happy… this will kill 3D-TV.’ However, one cynic responded saying: ‘I wonder if I should put a patch on one eye so I don’t see anything 3D.’
Reverse psychology… this will just make it MORE appealing, like the drug ads.
Tampa, Florida — It was an agency created by Congress just two months after 9-11 that was supposed to keep the flying public safe. However, several Transportation Security Administration inspectors working at Tampa International Airport tell us there are huge problems and holes in airport security.
One inspector told us they are supposed to defend the country against radical terrorists who want to hurt Americans, but they say they are working with handcuffs behind their backs. Another told us there could be multiple tragedies like 9-11 because of the security problems. Another says it is simply terrifying.
The inspectors could not only be fired for talking to us, but they could also go to jail for exposing what is wrong with the system. One supervisor told the inspectors at a public meeting that they know some are talking to the media and they will be charged with treason if they are caught. That’s why we are not revealing their identities.
This is unbelievable! RTFA!

On Tuesday 13 April, the fierce battle over abortion rights in the US took a new twist as Nebraska became the first state to restrict abortion to prevent alleged pain to the fetus.
By using this as the rationale for banning almost all abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, the new law contradicts the scientific consensus, which holds that fetuses are unlikely to be able to feel pain before 26 weeks. It is also the boldest and most direct challenge yet to the Roe vs Wade ruling of 1973, which gave US women almost unrestricted access to abortions.
So have there been new discoveries in fetal pain research that justify the Nebraska ruling? Or is the law based on a moral judgment?
Read the article for a Q&A on the issues.