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Gizmodo -
27 minutes ago
At first it seemed that the approval process for new apps for the iPhone App Store were pretty cut
and dry. You know, they can't duplicate the functionality of the on-board apps like Mail and
iPod,...
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NewsForge -
30 minutes ago
Gather round the table for a hearty feast of homemade dishes straight out of the Linux.com
forums. All your favorites are here --
heartburn-inducing Windows-to-Linux file permission problems, savory search tips, and little bits
of GNOME and Squid for those with an adventurous palate. And, of course, for dessert there's a
fresh slice of grandma's old-fashioned unanswered questions.
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ESPN.com -
33 minutes ago
The Oklahoma City Thunder, off to a league-worst 1-12 start in their new home town, have fired
coach P.J. Carlesimo, according to multiple media reports.
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CNET News.com -
35 minutes ago
Microsofts Jason Zander and Matt Carter talk tools and set out the companys manifesto for data
democracy.
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CNET News.com -
35 minutes ago
Microsofts Jason Zander and Matt Carter talk tools and set out the companys manifesto for data
democracy.
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TechCrunch -
36 minutes ago
This is a guest post by Kathlyn Clore, Associate Editor at the European Journalism
Centre who was kind enough to write this report for us after attending the press event.
A cadre of European politicians gathered Thursday at the Museum of the 18th century in Brussels
to launch Europeana, a digital
museum that allows visitors to explore classic paintings, photos, recordings and texts in the
same manner in which it is possible to search, say, Amazon.com.
Trying to access Europeana on the day of its launch, though, was akin to navigating the Vatican
Museums in the tourist-thick month of August. It was impossible to see anything, as the
project’s three servers were totally overwhelmed.
The Commission said Saturday in a press release that the site received about 10 million hits per
hour throughout Thursday - double server capacity. The site was taken down Friday evening and is
expected to be back up in mid-December.
Europeana’s three servers are located in the Hague, where the project is headquartered, but
programmers plan eventually to put mirror servers around the world.
A pair of Dutchmen programmed Europeana in about 10 weeks, said technical developer Eric Van der
Meulen. They added the final two of 21 European languages, Finnish and Hungarian, at 7 p.m. on
Wednesday.
Europeana, which is still in beta, was programmed using only open source applications, Van der
Meulen said.
“Once we get the thing finished and stabilized, we want to be able to put this down as an
open source application so other people can look at it and go, ‘Ok how did you do
this?,’ and ‘Wow, maybe we can use this for something.’ The future of computing
is open source and not only that but you can get a lot of input from all over the world this
way.”
Technical challenges included harvesting and normalizing metadata from more than 1,000 different
museums and libraries from around Europe. Half of participating cultural heritage institutions so
far are French. The Louvre in Paris, the Institut National de l’Audiovisuel (which
contributed footage shot on French battlefields in 1914) and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam are
three of the biggest participating museums.
Europeana is an outgrowth of The
European Library, on which Van der Meulen also worked. But it has in the press been compared
to Google’s Library
Project. Copyright concerns are abundant in all three projects.
Viviane Reding, European commissioner for media, worked to bring the European Digital Library to
fruition prior to realizing Europeana.
Issues of intellectual property will certainly complicate Reding’s goal of adding 10
million more objects over the next two years. The project will receive 2 million Euro over the
next two years for that goal, said European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso on Thursday.
For now, all objects on Europeana are in the public domain.
Reding said Thursday that she encourages users of the site to ‘remix’ what’s
available. Moving forward, she plans to facilitate dialogue among various stakeholders to find a
way to legally include contemporary works. Nobody wants a black hole when it comes to artifacts
from the 21st century, she stated. In particular, she said she will continue discussions with
books publishers in order to arrange for digitization of orphan works.
The difference between Europeana and existing library projects, though, is in the diversity of
digital objects available on Europeana. Van der Meulen, for example, is able to search the names
of his family members and come to a recording of his uncle’s 1970s rock band, the Makkers,
or photos of his father Leendert Van der Muelen, a world-class cyclist.
“It’s for a lot of people that way,” he said. “Its a fun toy. Everybody
Googles their name, you know. Only with this you get associations with your own name that you
wouldn’t find in Google.”
Crunch Network: CrunchGear
drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


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ESPN.com -
39 minutes ago
Visit ESPN.com for the complete story.
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CNET News.com -
45 minutes ago
Here are a few of CNET Reviews favorite items from the past week, including Adobe Flash CS4
Professional, the Flip Video MinoHD, and the BlackBerry Storm.
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BlenderNation -
49 minutes ago
Creating a short animated film can be artistically as well as financially rewarding.
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Rage3D Discussion Area - 75,85,87,93,99 -
53 minutes ago
Stupid question I guess.
I have some rally nice high end SATA II 3.0gb/s cables I ordered about a year ago. (So my
motherboard fried and I ran out yesterday to Fry's to get a new one: ASUS PQ5 Deluxe). The problem
is that new ASUS motherboard has very slim SATA headers. My nice cables didn't fit because the lock
part on them makes them just a tiny bit too fat to squeeze in. So, I had no choice but to use the
red ones that came in the motherboard box.
I just remember reading crap way back when that SATA cables supplied with motherboards were always
1.5gb/s and that 3.0gb/s cables were unique in some way.
Am I cool, or do I need to order some SATA II 3.0gb/s cables? Thanks
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Breaking News: CBSNews.com -
59 minutes ago
... And on a shoestring, yet, from Fort Worth chef Jon Bonnell, on The Early Show Saturday Edition.
His restaurant, Fort Worth restaurant Bonnell's Fine Texas Cuisine, is a leader in Lone Star State
Cuisine.div class="feedflare" a href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=fuyBn"img
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src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~4/461849398" height="1" width="1"/

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FT.com - Europe homepage -
59 minutes ago
France's Socialists were in disarray after Martine Aubry, architect of the 35-hour work week, won a
bitter leadership battle by a wafer-thin majority that split the party in two
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BlenderNation -
1 hours and 3 minutes ago
This came in just this morning - if you live in Sao Paolo and you don#039;t have plans for this
afternoon then here#039;s a nice chance to hook up with some Blenderheads. Anna Paula wrote:
The...br/ br/ [read the full article on blendernation.com]img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Blendernation/~4/461839605" height="1" width="1"/
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BlenderNation -
1 hours and 3 minutes ago
This came in just this morning - if you live in Sao Paolo and you don't have plans for this
afternoon then here's a nice chance to hook up with some Blenderheads. Anna Paula wrote: The
seminary’s purpose is that we need to increase the search for Blender and show its importance
compared to others 3D softwares. SEMINARY [...]
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Tame The Web: Libraries and Technology -
1 hours and 4 minutes ago
Seth Godin called up on the Tribe to write a book together in response to his book
Tribes. Take a look:
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/files/TribesQA2.pdf
There’s so much gold here, I can’t choose a snippet to share. Take a look. This would
be an excellent discussion point for staff meetings and long range planning. Maybe the new long
range plans for some innovative libraries will be: How can they lead the tribe?

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LegalTorrents -
1 hours and 5 minutes ago
Download the attachment
Time. Space. Repeat. is an ever shifting gestalt entity of spirits contained within the glass jar
of London... luckily, someone remembered to punch some holes in the lid so that we could
breathe.... We have variously been described as optimistic post-rock, beautiful, lovely and not my
cup of tea. Currently Time. Space. Repeat. contains:Sonic James Doom - guitar / bass / vocals /
keyboardThe Rev. Sachin Patel - guitar / laptop / vocalsAnia Borsuk - drumsKen Chu - bass / guitar
/ vocalsSophie Scott - violin / vocals in all honesty their free to download album available within
entitled 'early transmissions' is as perfect an album as I've heard in a long while - okay then at
least since those sneak previews of the Shady Bard debut - think glacial widescreen backdrops
scored by early career Sigur Ros, mind altering chemically enhanced moving shapes supplied by
spacemen 3 / spiritualised and production by the home made pre major label era Earlies - Mark @
Losing Today
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Engadget -
1 hours and 8 minutes ago

There's been a serious dearth of Hello
Kitty-branded products these days, but the dry-spell is thankfully at an end, with the arrival
of the Hello Kitty C1. The crazy cat's apparently first-ever netbook is (as you can see in the
photo) quite a looker, and it's packing a 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 CPU with 1GB DDR2 SDRAM, a 945 GSE
Express chipset and a 120GB hard drive. The 10.1-inch netbook's also got two USB ports, a 1.3
megapixel webcam and WiFi. It's going to cost you 890 smackers to make this yours, but the
sassiness alone kind of makes it worth it, doesn't it?
[Via CNET]
Filed under: Laptops
Hello Kitty C1 netbook packs a lotta 'tude into a small package originally appeared on
Engadget on Sat, 22 Nov 2008 08:37:00 EST. Please see our
terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email
this | Comments
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Breaking News: CBSNews.com -
1 hours and 11 minutes ago
Sheik Abdulla bin Hamad Al Khalifa is suing the King of Pop in London for $7 million, money the
Sheikh says was an advance for a music project Jackson abandoned. But the singer says the music was
a gift.div class="feedflare" a href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=EJwSn"img
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src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=FLo2N" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~4/461838657" height="1" width="1"/

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FOXNews.com -
1 hours and 11 minutes ago
Cate Blanchett says 'spooning' in bed is the secret to a happy marriage.
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I4U News -
1 hours and 12 minutes ago
Google selected a little village in Upper Austria for a huge Server farm. Google bought 183 acres
land to build the new server center for Europe. The new Google data center will provide 50 IT
jobs when it opens in two years. The reasons for Google to...
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