This article is: Was Apples choice to rid its notebooks of PC Card slots a bad one?
Tip: We only provide abstract for users. If you want to read the full article, please click the Full Article Link.
You may be interested in these articles:
Posted by ZDNet Editor @ 12:47 pm Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
K12 woos Wyoming to provide virtual homeschool
Posted by ZDNet Editor @ 12:47 pm
Categories: Education Technology, Online Education, K-12
Tags: School, K12, ZDNet Editor
As virtual schools gain popularity among unaffiliated homeschoolers, public schools are offering virtual school programs as well, reports the Casper Star Tribune.
Taxpayers wittingly or unwittingly are increasingly supporting virtual schools, as states sign on to for-profit virtual programs, such as K12 Inc., a popular elementary virtual school based in McLean, Va.
"As long as you have Internet access, you can get online and do it," Suzanne Johnsrud, a mom who homeschools two children.
K12 serves about 25,000 homeschoolers enrolled through schools in 13 different states, plus anot...
...
Posted by Richard Koman @ September 13, 2006 @ 12:03 PM Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
In CA, Dem Angelides team leaked Arnolds hot talk to press
Posted by Richard Koman @ September 13, 2006 @ 12:03 PM
Categories: Government technology, State Local Govt
Tags: Web Server, Team, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Camp, Computer Associates International Inc., ZDNet Government
Let us consider the government IT implications of one hot story in todays news - the revelations that Phil Angelides, Democratic candidate for governor, or rather his campaign team grabbed and leaked to the LA Times audio of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger describing a Latina assemblywoman as "hot" and Cubans and blacks as "hot-blooded" people.
When the story broke, the governors office claimed their system had been hacked and initiated a CHP investigation.
The LA Times reported yester...
...
Posted by Roland Piquepaille @ 11:33 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
UAVs in the eye of hurricanes
Posted by Roland Piquepaille @ 11:33 am
Categories: Space Aerospace, Robotics, Energy Environment, Science Nature
Tags:
Its not the first time that small unmanned autonomous vehicles (UAVs) are used to explore dangerous areas for humans such as the hurricane surface layer. But in Tiny uncrewed aircraft to fly into hurricanes, New Scientist reports that NASA is operating several of these aircrafts from Key West, Florida, for a whole month. The Aerosonde will measure the temperature, pressure, humidity and wind velocity inside storms over the Ocean. This $50,000 aircraft can be launched from the top of a car, can fly for 18 hours, weighs about 12 kilograms and is remotely controlled via a simple PC. But read more
Here is the ...
...
Posted by ZDNet Editor @ 11:31 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
Teachers blog!
Posted by ZDNet Editor @ 11:31 am
Categories: Education Technology, Emerging Tech
Tags: Blog, Teacher, ZDNet Editor
You know a trend is big when even teachers are doing it. And teachers are in fact blogging to inform parents about whats happening in the classroom. They are being received with mixed results, however, reports The Boston Globe.
Nobody has been keeping track of how teachers use their blogs but Will Richardson - a former teacher, author of the Weblogg-ed blog, and author of a new book, Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms - says that teachers blog about everything from Harry Potter to writing essays.
"I can whip out something in maybe five minutes and immediately post it," said Melanie Sullivan...
...
Posted by Donna Bogatin @ 11:12 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
Internet land grab for on-demand entertainment consumer
Posted by Donna Bogatin @ 11:12 am
Categories: Business Models, Web 2.0, Media, Advertising, Culture, User-Generated Content, AOL, Social Web, Video, YouTube, Amateur Content, Brands, Marketing, TV
Tags:
September 12, 2006, was a banner day for competition in the interactive entertainment space. NBC, Apple and AT&T announced various products, services and plans to claim their rightful shares of the interactive consumer entertainment market.
In-brief, below, the high-powered power plays for ownership of the on-demand, interactive entertainment content consumer.
IN THEIR OWN WORDS
Company provided information excerpted from press releases.
NBBC (National Broadband Company)
nbbc Creates Digita...
...
Posted by Dan Farber @ 11:08 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
CIO visions: Yahoo CIO Lars Rabbe on innovation
Posted by Dan Farber @ 11:08 am
Categories: General, IT Management, Personal Technology, Software Infrastructure, Hardware Infrastructure, Security, Web Technology
Tags:
Starting off a series of CIO interviews focusing on innovation, I chatted with Lars Rabbe of Yahoo. Rabbe joined Yahoo as its CIO June 2003, and is responsible for the overall strategic direction and execution of Yahoo!s global information technology infrastructure. Prior to joining the company,including internal applications such as billing and advertising systems, as well as internal and external infrastructure and information security. Rabbe previously was senior vice president and CIO of Redback Networks and also working as an IT execut...
...
Posted by Dan Farber @ 11:04 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
Kevin Rose on the state of Digg
Posted by Dan Farber @ 11:04 am
Categories: General, Personal Technology, Web Technology
Tags:
I spent some time today at the Future of Web Apps Summit at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco. Gavin Clarke of The Register called the event the Web equivalent of Star Trek convention. Some of the main actors in the theatre of Web 2.0 held forth on stage, starting with Kevin Rose of Digg, regaling the crowd with a demo of the site and then a walk through its origins and development.
Rose talked about how Digg was conceived in October 2004 and launched at a cost of $2,000 using the open source LAMP stack and $99 per month hosting, and promoting it via blogs, tapping into a core audience of passionate tech enthusiasts. To...
...
Posted by David Berlind @ 10:59 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
Microsoft patent non-assertion covenant is remarkable
Posted by David Berlind @ 10:59 am
Categories: General, Open Source, IT Management, Software Infrastructure, Web Technology
Tags:
In Focus ? See more posts on: Software Patents
Microsoft has issued a declaration something it calls the Open Specification Promise that it wont assert certain Web services patents it holds (or may hold in the future). Martin Lamonica reports:
Microsoft is pledging not to assert its patents pertaining to nearly three dozen Web services specificationsa move designed to ease concerns among developers by creating a legal environment more friendly to open-source software.The software giant published on Tuesday the Microsoft Open Specification Promise (OSP) on its Web site.
...
...
Posted by Matthew Miller @ 10:54 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
GSM Windows Mobile Treo joins thumb keyboard crowd
Posted by Matthew Miller @ 10:54 am
Categories: Windows Mobile, Smartphone
Tags:
Back in July, Palm, Microsoft, and Vodafone announced that a new Treo would be coming before the end of 2006. Very few details were provided about this new device, but yesterday Palm officially announced the Treo 750v. The Treo 750v confirmed specifications include Windows Mobile 5.0 with MSFP/AKU2 update for Direct Push email support, 3G/UMTS radio, 1.3 megapixel camera, miniSD expansion slot and integrated Bluetooth. Palm will continue to enhance the Windows Mobile experience with their software customization that now includes an updated SMS/MMS application that is similar to the Palm OS experience with a "virtual chat" th...
...
Posted by Dan Farber @ 10:19 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
Sun rolls out new products
Posted by Dan Farber @ 10:19 am
Categories: General, Open Source, IT Management, Software Infrastructure, Hardware Infrastructure, Security, Web Technology
Tags:
Sun executives were in New York City to give a boost to its low-end UltraSparc-based servers, cranking up the processor speed with 1.5GHz UltraSparc IIIi processors and the I/O with PCI-X and PCI Express, as well as adding RAID on the motherboard and a redundant power supply. All the Java and Solaris tools are bundled with the systems, as an added benefit to developers. Stephen Shankland has the details on the new systems as well as new Niagara-based , included a blade system, designed for the telecom sector.
Dan Farber, editor-in-chief of CNET News.com, has more th...
...
Posted by Ed Bott @ 10:09 am Year:September 13th, 2006 Source Site:zdnet
September 13th, 2006
Apple takes back the copycat title
Posted by Ed Bott @ 10:09 am
Categories: Windows Vista, Apple, Hardware
Tags:
Apparently, every copy of Mac OS X comes with a Cognitive Dissonance add-in. This feature allows Mac cultists to loudly accuse Microsoft of ripping off features when its convenient, and to blindly miss the ripoffs that go the other way.
Case in point: Yesterdays far-from-earthshattering Apple announcements.
Over at the Cult of Mac blog, Leander Kahney gushes over Apples new Cover Flow interface, which allows you to browse your music collection using pictures of album covers.
Just as its easy to see quickly what the jukebox has to offer, its now easy to see whats been hiding in your ever-growing digital music collection.
As Jobs mentioned...
...