Friday, August 5, 2011

News » Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks

Posted by echa 9:26 PM, under , | No comments

Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks | Game Girl Boobs

Girls that are hot and are techies…sign us up! While techies (or geeks for that matter) aren’t exactly thought of as very sex symbols, these five babes are definitely defying the norm—especially with their amazing racks (coupled with their intelligence, of course). And they are by no means in any particular order because they all rank No. 1 in our book!

Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks | Marina Orlova
Marina Orlova

This busy babe, who hails from Russia, has both beauty and brains. Orlova holds two degrees in philology (the study of linguistics and origins of words) and is the author of Hot For Words, which is a spin off from her YouTube videos that school you on words on their meanings. Despite what be a boring subject, we’ll listen to whatever this buxom blond tells cares to share! Like her tagline says, “Intelligence is Sexy!”

Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks | Veronica Belmont
Veronica Belmont

Looking the cutie next door, Veronica Belmont is a self-proclaimed geek and we wouldn’t have it any other way! She’s all about tech, gadgets, video, geek culture, gaming and kittens, so her site describes. Based out of San Francisco, CA, she’s a technology and gaming video host, as well as a contributor for Qore (a mag about PS3 for Sony), Tekzilla and many more. She’s an avid gamer and social-networking junkie, which makes her the perfect girl if you’re a serious gamer!

Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks | Jolie O’Dell
Jolie O’Dell

The sultry Jolie O’Dell is a tech writer and journalist and has written for numerous entities like Mashable, VentureBeat and more. Another San Francisco native, O’Dell really knows her tech. She has a B.A. in Media Studies, but went back to school to study Java and programming, so this hottie can code like no one’s business!

Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks | Olivia Munn
Olivia Munn

This modern day busty geek goddess does it all! She’s an actress, model, TV host and author, not to mention one of the hottest techies on the planet! Munn turned heads as the co-host of “Attack of the Show!” on the G4 network and has since then become a “Daily Show” correspondent in addition to her many other projects.

Top Five Tech Girls with the Best Racks | Jessica Chobot
Jessica Chobot

She licks PSPs, loves video games and has a hot body (and even better rack)…basically every guy’s dream girl! Jessica Chobot hosts IGN Weekly and is the video game hottie for “The Daily Habit” on Fuel TV,in addition to other gigs like writing the “Ask Jess, Dammit!” blog for Maxim. When she’s not getting her gaming fix, Chobot is feeding her Japanese culture fixation with lots of anime and manga!

Review » iHome SD63 Retro Headphones

Posted by echa 9:16 PM, under | No comments

iHome SD63 Retro Headphones
Retro is in.  Always has been and always well be.  Take for instance classic cars.  A 60s Mustang will forever hold its value.  And lets not forget about the music.  It will forever have a place in everyone’s hearts, old or young.  And as it turns out, the fine folks that make those iHome Devices, SDI technologies, have their roots in an era when things were built to last.

The company has now reissued their SD63 Retro-Style Hi-Fi Stereo Headphones.  Aesthetically they’re all 60s, but on the inside is today’s tech, although speaker technology hasn’t snadvanced all that much in the last 40 years; as far as we know it’s still a coil and magnet setup to a large degree.  iHome says these phones boast rich hi-fi sound, plush air cushioned ear pads, an adjustable headband and a rotary volume knob on the headphone for added convenience.  And guess what?  You can buy them today for $49.99.

Review » Smartfish Whirl Mini Laser Notebook Mouse

Posted by echa 9:14 PM, under | No comments

Smartfish Whirl Mini Laser Notebook Mouse1
Today I’m going to talk about the little brother to the mouse I reviewed yesterday. The Smartfish Whirl Mini is supposed to be perfect for laptop users, and just as effective as the Smartfish Whirl Desktop version for keeping your hand and wrist straight while using it. So how well does it hold up compared to it’s bigger brother?

First things first:  the design of the Smartfish Whirl Mini Laser Notebook Mouse is pretty much the same as the larger version, with a few notable differences.  The main difference is the color scheme; no longer just boring and cheap glossy black plastic, the Smartfish Whirl Mini sports a very nice grey (or other color – they have several to choose from) plastic middle (the plastic feels more heavy duty than on the desktop version as well) and it also picks up a black rubberized piece on each of the sides.  These black pieces help to make sure the Whirl Mini doesn’t accidentally slip out of your hand, and gives you something with a slight texture to grip.
Smartfish Whirl Mini Laser Notebook Mouse2
Another difference is the DPI settings – while the desktop model could go as high as 1600 DPI and as low as 400 DPI, the Whirl Mini is locked in at 800 DPI.  I don’t understand why the ability to change the settings was removed from the Whirl Mini, but it is what it is.  800 is respectable when dealing with laptop mice, but it surely isn’t the cream of the crop.
The Whirl Mini has no advanced features you might like to see either (just like the larger desktop version) – no web buttons, no zoom buttons, etc.  Just the standard two face buttons, and the scroll wheel.  It was a problem with the larger version, and continues to be a problem here as well.
The problems that are seen throughout the Whirl line are really a shame for the Whirl Mini.  It’s by far the better of the two mice in terms of comfort, feel, and design.  With other laptop mice I find myself using the touch pad still more than I do the mouse, but with the Whirl Mini I was actually using the mouse exclusively.  Since I sit with my laptop on my lap when I use it, my hand is usually lower to begin with than if I was on my desktop.  What that meant to me, was that the Whirl Mini really felt natural in my hand.

Smartfish Whirl Mini Laser Notebook Mouse3
Another nice thing is that it’s a LOT more portable than it’s desktop counterpart.  It’s about three quarters of the overall size of the desktop version, but only a little over half of the height.  The ErgoMotion pivot point has a much lower profile than the desktop model, which makes it seem a lot less likely to snap off.  While the wireless feature is also essentially the same between the desktop version and the Whirl Mini, the dongle on the Mini is a little bit smaller, and sits almost flush with the side of my laptop, meaning it’s not uncomfortable when it hits my leg.

While I’m finding myself enjoying the use of the Smartfish Whirl Mini, I still can’t justify giving it a score higher than four start out of five.  Yes it’s comfortable, and yes it might be improving the circulation in my hand, but the fact that it still has no advanced features that are standard at other mice with the same price point is a deal breaker for me.  Couple that with the fact that they removed the ability to change the DPI, and four is generous.  Don’t get me wrong, if you really want an ergonomic mouse for your laptop, this is a good choice – there just might be better.

Pros:
  • Compact design
  • The cheap and ugly look of the desktop version has been fixed
  • Very comfortable to use
Cons:
  • Removing the ability to change the DPI was not smart
  • No advanced features to speak of
  • Might be too small if you have larger hands
You can pick up the Smartfish Whirl Mini Laser Notebook Mouse from Amazon for $37.01

Review » StressVest Delivers 4,500 Volts Instead of Bullets (video)

Posted by echa 9:09 PM, under | No comments

StressVest Delivers 4,500 Volts


There is nothing worse than not knowing if you’ve been shot.  Chances are that won’t be the case if you’re hit with an actual bullet.  We’re actually referring to police training or just a friendly game of laser tag.  So what’s an aspiring gun shot wound victim, or inducer, to do?

Drop $2,500 and get the StressVest.  It delivers a real time shock, up to 4,500 volts, when your mark has been hit with a real gun retrofitted with one of their compatible, eye safe lasers.   For police force trainees this is essential since it induces stress and provides a more real world experience, demanding them to think under the pressure of not only gun fire, but the possibility of actually being wounded in the line of fire.  With each subsequent hit the voltage (i.e. stress) can automatically be increased. And unlike paintball, there is no mess to clean up and the chances of an unprotected individual being hit from a stray shot are zero to none.

In the event you’re looking for a more casual experience – you’ll need to have a federal ID to pick one of these up – the StressVest can be set to a vibration mode.  Additionally, shooting distances can mimic that of the would be actual ammunition, and the lasers work through windows or windshields.

Review » Griffin Intellicase: Folio iPad Case with Smartcover

Posted by echa 9:06 PM, under , | No comments

Folio iPad Case with Smartcover 

Striving for perfection, while impossible, should always be the goal at hand.  And if any iPad 2 case is gonna come close to that, it’s probably gotta be Griffin’s IntelliCase.  The case is designed to protect both the back and front of the tablet, all the while incorporating a smart cover that automatically wakes up the iPad when it’s removed thanks to a set of built-in magnets.  But that’s not all.  The flexible cover folds back and serves as an upright workstand or can be laid down for watching movies or casually surfing the web.  And yes, all of the iPad’s ports are left open for easy access.

Griffin has it available right now for $59.99.

News » Outrun Video Game Electric Car (video)

Posted by echa 9:03 PM, under | No comments

Video Game Electric Car 

An electric card with a display that renderes the real world, as you drive, in in the style of the 1986 video game OutRun by Sega.

Review » Bleach Soul Resurreccion

Posted by echa 8:56 PM, under | No comments

Bleach Soul Resurreccion1


This is my first video game review here as I’ve really been shying away from them lately.  I just don’t have the time to devote to playing everything anymore.  However when I found out that NIS of America was bring the new Bleach game to the states, I made sure my calendar was completely clear so I could get my hands on it.

First and foremost, I am a HUGE Bleach fan and have been for years.  I not only watch the English dubs on Cartoon Network with my son, but I regularly watch fan-subs as well, so I’m usually well ahead of the English story.  In short, I’m a pretty big Bleach fanatic.  While some might think that would skew the rating on my review, they’d be wrong – I love these characters because they’re so deep.  I wouldn’t give a good rating to anything that didn’t hold up to the anime and manga expectations.

Bleach Soul Resurreccion2

That being said, if you’re not a Bleach fan this will probably pass under your radar – and not without reason.  While the world of Bleach is a masterfully written story, very little of that shines through here.  If you don’t know who the characters are before starting the game, you probably won’t know who they are when you’re done with it either.  If you have no idea what Hueco Mundo is, or what the difference is between Fake Karakura Town and regular Karakura Town; well you won’t pick that up here.  Apart from the three or so paragraphs of information that gets narrated before each chapter to let you know what’s going on and the simplistic banter (only a line or two every now and then) there’s nothing to tie the story together for a Bleach “noob”.

If you do watch and/or read Bleach regularly however, you’ll be able to instantly pick up on where each mission is in the grand scheme of the story.  Whether it’s Ichigo facing down Grimmjow, or Kenpachi vs Nnoitra, there are enough major fight scenes for you to re-enact that those alone make it great for a Bleach fan.  The action in the game is fast and furious (not the movie), and while it does take a few cues from the Dynasty Warriors games, it also does quite a bit to improve on them.

Bleach Soul Resurreccion3

One thing that’s great (and that drive me insane) is the ability to upgrade different characters by using the experience they gain by playing them.  There is a whole field of upgrades for each character, and for a completionist like myself – it’s maddening.  The game rewards you by playing well and keeping a combo going by increasing the amount of experience you gain per kill (at one point I finished a level with over 10,000 because I kept my combo going from the level start to the boss fight), and it really pushes you to try different things to achieve that perfect run.

Unfortunately, the game is short, very short, only about four hours long (for the story mode), and maybe another three to four hours with the mission mode.  Unless you’re like me and want to upgrade each of the characters to their max level, there’s really no point to going back through everything once you finish with everyone.

Bleach Soul Resurreccion4

Something else they got right though is the artwork.  Bleach Soul Resurreccion looks gorgeous if you’re a fan of cell shading.  It looks like it was ripped right out of the manga, and each of the characters looks as close to perfect as they can.  Even the backgrounds in Hueco Mundo are really good (Fake Karakura Town looks pretty boring unfortunately), and very reminiscent of the manga/anime.

So there you have it, if you’re a Bleach that’s been waiting for a game to do the series justice, this is as close as you’re going to get right now.  Yes it’s short, and yes it has it’s flaws, but it’s fun and great if you just want to throw down.  If you’re looking for a challenging and deep game though, you may want to look elsewhere.  For me, I give the game four stars out of five.

Bleach Soul Resurreccion5

Pros:
  • The artwork is amazing
  • Combat is fast and fun
  • Characters feel just like they should
Cons:
  • The game is extremely short for a retail purchase
  • The depth of story isn’t explored
  • Level up system, while fun, artificially extends gameplay
You can get Bleach Soul Resurreccion from Amazon for $59.99

Review » Blackberry Torch 9850 Coming Soon, Actual Release Date And Price Unknown

Posted by echa 8:51 PM, under | No comments

Blackberry Torch 9850 
Blackberry Torch 9850


Oh RIM, how we’ll miss you. Okay, that might be a bit unfair, but in late the company just can’t seem to get a break in terms of an exciting device. Like most companies they’ve “dialed” it in for too long and have failed to unveil handsets that are vastly different from one and other, and boast the allure of an iPhone or an Android handset, which have long had the luxury of owning.

However, RIM’s latest, the Blackberry Torch 9850/9860 might be the closest thing we’ve seen to stave off their downward spiral. But from where we sit that ain’t saying much. It’s a touchscreen affair measuing 3.7-inches with an 800×480 resolution. Okay, we can live with that. There is also the presence of a 5 megapixel camera, which isn’t lack luster, but in today’s marketplace there are many phones sporting 8 megapixel shooters so it’s a bit perplexing as to why they just didn’t max the thing out. While the RAM is suffiecent, 768MB, it only ships with 4GB of storage, though you can expand that to 32GB via a microsSD card. We’re a bit skeptical, but RIM says that the 1230mAh battery can achieve a 13 day standby time – you can cut that number down by 90% in NYC, where cell tower competition is up the ying yang. And there is of course WiFi, GPS, an optical touchpad, the ability to record 720p video and Blackberry’s newest OS, OS 7.

If you’re wondering about the release date and the price, well, just keep on wondering. RIM is mum on that info, though we suspect it will arrive sometime late in the year, which by all accounts is a risky move since Apple will surely release the newest iPhone around the same time.

Did we mention that it’s 11.5mm wide, where as the iPhone 4 is just 9.3mm? Fatty if you ask us, but maybe you’re a chubby chaser.

Review » Sparrow Key Chain Prevents Key Loss Returning to the Nest

Posted by echa 8:48 PM, under | No comments

Sparrow Key Chain Prevents Key Loss Returning to the Nest

Lose your keys much?  The best way to combat that short coming is to place your keys in the same place.  Most people tend to opt for the dish or a hook by the front door.  But come on, that’s boring at best.

The Sparrow Key Ring is straight up adorable.  It attaches to your keys using, what else, a standard key chain ring.  The birdhouse sticks to the wall using a self adhesive sticker or included screws.   When you come home you place the birdy back in its house.  After all, home is where the heart is, and God forbid that tweetie bird be without one, and you without your keys when you’re flying out the door.

The Sparrow Key Ring costs $18, and comes in black, lime green, pink, yellow and a few other colors.  It also doubles as a whistle.  How appropriate.

Review » Digital Bathtub Thermometer RetroFits Any Faucet with No Installation

Posted by echa 8:44 PM, under | No comments

Digital Bathtub Thermometer RetroFits Any Faucet with No Installation 

Cooking your kids, while great if you’re a cannibal with a penchant for Casey Anthony syndrome (she’s so guilty), is probably not a good idea if you wanna remain in the good graces of society, not to mention on the other side of the steel bars.  So to insure you don’t burn your kids with boiling hot water you should probably take a close look at this handy gizmo that fits over most faucets and provides a digital temperature read out.  It’s even color coded in the event your vision is acting up from all the late night partying.

Digital Bathtub Thermometer RetroFits Any Faucet with No Installation 

We’re not entirely sure if this product can be purchased separately since it is included with ThinkGeek’s infant bathtub, which features a built-in clean water reservoir for rinsing off the young tike.  But heck, it’s just $89.99 and ships with a rinse cup.  Now that’s value!

News: What's the Deal With Online Coupon World?

Posted by echa 8:39 PM, under | No comments

What's the Deal With Online Coupon World?  
This June 10, 2011 file photo shows the Groupon logo engraved in a glass office partition in the company's international headquarters in Chicago, Illinois. (AFP Photo)


New York. One maxim rings true in the burgeoning world of online coupons: Everybody wants a deal.

In recent months, Groupon and LivingSocial have been leading a virtual land grab, with dozens of companies angling for a bigger share of the fast-growing market and swallowing start-ups at a rapid rate.

There have been 37 acquisitions in the online coupon industry so far this year, compared with five in all of 2010, according to the 451 Group, a research firm that tracks the market. This week Google purchased Dealmap, a discount aggregator; CrowdSavings acquired LuckyMonkey.com, a Kansas-based deal site; and LivingSocial bought TicketMonster, one of the largest players in South Korea.

While the acquisitions remain small, at $10 million or less, the frenetic pace reflects the industry's ambitions. Companies are looking to cash in on the highly fragmented but lucrative local advertising market. Restaurants, retailers and other small merchants are expected to spend $16.1 billion this year on Internet advertising, according to Borrell Associates.

As sites jostle for the attention of local businesses and consumers, scale matters. Companies need a large sales force to connect with local vendors in major cities across the globe. Groupon, for example, has more than 7,000 employees. Merchants also tend to spend more money to list deals with sites that can attract the greatest number of potential customers, or subscribers.

With TicketMonster, LivingSocial will increase its base by 2 million users and add roughly $24 million in revenue a month. TicketMonster, a one-year-old Korean start-up, is a deal maker in its own right, having purchased Integrated Methods, a Malaysian social shopping site, less than three months ago.

''We thought Korea was an incredibly attractive market; Asia in general is an area we are really excited about," said Jake Maas, a LivingSocial senior vice president, who would not disclose the terms of the deal. "In TicketMonster, we also saw a team that could innovate quickly and drive innovation in the category."

The leaders have moved especially quickly to expand overseas. On top of TicketMonster, LivingSocial has bought four other daily deal sites this year, covering cities in Europe, Dubai and Thailand. Groupon — which made its first major foreign play last year, with the $126 million purchase of Germany's CityDeal — has recently entered into Indonesia, South Africa and Israel via acquisitions.

''Snapping up international startups is one way for companies like Groupon and LivingSocial to gain a foothold before competitors lock up the market, as we've seen happen with slower-gestating e-commerce and social networking properties in the past," said Tim Miller, a vice president at the 451 Group, a technology industry analyst company.

But the frenzy also underscores the vulnerability of the business model. With thousands of clones across the globe, Groupon, Living Social and other players need to expand into new markets and acquire rival teams. If they don't, they risk losing out to competitors — or worse, becoming the MySpace of the online coupon industry.

That's because first-mover advantage is crucial. Earlier this year, Groupon started a venture in China with a local partner, Tencent, one of country's largest Internet companies. But the site Gaopeng was among the later entrants to the space, and it has floundered amid the thousands of competitors, armed with robust local sales teams.

In June, a site called Meituan was China's top daily deal service in June, by revenue, according to a June report from Dataotuan, an industry aggregator. Gaopeng did not place in the Top 10.

''When you first enter a market, it's cheaper to advertise, and you can potentially suck up a lot of merchants and subscribers before anyone else does," said Stuart Wall, the chief executive of Signpost, a site that charges vendors a flat monthly rate to advertise deals. "So there's a short-term benefit."

Deal-making doesn't necessarily guarantee dominance, either.

For one thing, the industry is still relatively young. Groupon is less than three years old. And it's unclear whether the companies can sustain their growth trajectories or what will happen as the industry matures, according to Sucharita Mulpuru, a Forrester Research analyst, who has been bearish on the daily deal model. A crowded market and the growing cost of acquiring vendors and consumers could eventually stymie the frothy sector.

''These companies have not even mastered their operations in the U.S., and now they're trying to grow in markets they frankly have no business being in," she said. "The acquisition strategy is a better approach than trying to build it on their own, but is this business even viable in these countries?"

New York Times

News: As Android Surges Microsoft and Google Trade Punches in Patent Spat

Posted by echa 8:36 PM, under , | No comments

As Android Surges Microsoft and Google Trade Punches in Patent Spat 
The ViewSonic ViewPad 10 tablet computer is displayed, in Atlanta. The ViewPad 10 is a dual-boot tablet that comes with both Windows and Android operating systems. (AP Photo/ Ron Harris)


San Francisco. Google Inc's Android operating system has deepened its dominance of US smartphone sales and now enjoys a 40 percent share of the market, according to figures released Thursday by research firm ComScore.

Apple Inc's iPhone ousted RIM's Blackerry for second place with 26.6 percent market share in the second quarter, the report said.

Also Thursday, research firm IDC named the iPhone as the world's top selling smartphone with 19.1 percent of shipments, almost three percent above second-placed Samsung's 16 percent share.

The new sales figures came amid an escalating spat between Google and a group of tech giants headed by Microsoft and Apple which Google has accused of collaborating to strangle Android smartphones.

Google's chief legal officer David Drummond on Wednesday accused the two tech giants of plotting a "hostile, organized campaign" against Android using a portfolio of patents that they recently bought from bankrupt telecom equipment maker Nortel for 4.5 billion dollars.

Their plan, according to Drummond, was to "strangle Android" by using "bogus patents" to force makers of Android smartphones to pay them licensing fees.

But Microsoft head of communications Frank Shaw responded via Twitter Thursday that Microsoft had in fact reached out to Google to join the purchasing group but was summarily rebuffed.

Shaw even quoted from the email sent by Google to Microsoft in which it declined the invitation. "After talking with people here, it sounds as though for various reasons a joint bid wouldn't be advisable for us on this one," Google's general counsel Kent Walker wrote in the e-mail. "But I appreciate your flagging it, and we're open to discussing other similar opportunities in the future." "Free advice for David Drummond," quipped Shaw. "Next time check with Kent Walker before you blog." Drummond responded later Thursday saying that Google declined to partner with Microsoft on the patents because such a move would have cost billions of dollars without allowing Google to use the patents to defend itself against claims by Microsoft and its bidding partners.

"Making sure that we would be unable to assert these patents to defend Android - and having us pay for the privilege - must have seemed like an ingenious strategy to them," Drummond said. "We didn't fall for it."


DPA

News: New Media Is New Mainstay For Young Information Seekers

Posted by echa 8:33 PM, under | No comments

New Media Is New Mainstay For Young Information Seekers  
A Twitter user catching up on the news at his office in Jakarta on Thursday. More younger Indonesians rely on a combination of new and conventional media as a way to get their information. (JG Photo/Jurnasyanto Sukarno)



Syifa Merdekawati has her own recipe for getting the news: Take a couple hours of television viewing, add in a steady stream of Twitter feeds from news portals and top it off with several hours of poring over newspapers on the weekend.

For the 20-year-old university student, Twitter is the medium of choice when it comes to getting instant news updates.

“I watch television occasionally, depending on my schedule,” she said. “Nowadays I only get to watch TV for two hours in the evening because I’m interning.”

But despite getting much of her daily news fix from digital platforms, Syifa says she still turns to newspapers to get a broader perspective on stories.

“The good thing about newspapers is that they give more detailed and complete information,” she says, adding that she tends to look out for stories on social and cultural issues that interest her.

“For instance, I’ve been following the debate over censoring [Internet] pornography and on the development of batik, because I’m interested in those issues. I don’t follow political or corruption stories. It’s not that I think they’re irrelevant, it’s just that I’m not into them.”

Syifa’s reliance on a combination of new and old media appears to be a growing trend among younger Indonesians, despite reports of shifting global trends toward exclusive consumption of new media for the younger generation, says Lita Natanagara, a business director for McCann Worldgroup Indonesia, a marketing communications company.

She points out that younger Indonesians have not abandoned print and other conventional media the way that their peers in the West have done. She says even if there is a decline in the consumption of conventional media by the younger generation, it is not very significant and is only apparent in some major urban centers.

“What the young people consume through digital platforms still serves to complement what they consume through conventional ones,” Lita says. “It rounds out the information they already have.”

Similar trends elsewhere have prompted traditional media outlets to adapt. Radio Australia, for instance, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s international radio and online service, has expanded its outreach by making its content available on mobile and digital platforms.

Mike McCluskey, the chief executive of Radio Australia, says that despite having a loyal audience in the 40-and-up demographic, the company recognizes the need to make its programs appealing to younger audiences amid changing demographics.

“Our [older] audience is still there and people at that age still tune in to our content,” he says. “[It’s said] the older audience is dying out, but not yet.”

McCluskey says Radio Australia’s programing appeals more to older people because much of what it puts out is serious, talk-based content, while the younger audience is more focused on entertainment and lifestyle.

“We do have to make content that appeals to younger audiences as well. You can’t rely just on the older demographic listening to traditional media forms,” he says. “This is one reason why we’re making our media content available in digital online and mobile platforms.”

McCluskey, who has been in radio for 28 years, says that while the trend may be shifting, people still have a tendency to become more interested in serious, talk-based content as they get older.

“I think one of the challenges is to maintain that high quality and news-focused content and to engage younger people by trying to make news and talk-based content more relevant and more stimulating, more interesting and dealing with issues that matter to younger people,” he says.

Maika Randini, a spokeswoman for media research firm Nielsen Indonesia, says 97 percent of Indonesians in the 10-29 age band still watch television, but fewer are reading newspapers or listening to radio compared to 2009.

“On the contrary, there’s been a significant increase during the past year in the use of the Internet for this age group, from 29 percent to 41 percent,” she says.

Most of the younger generation, or 57 percent, read no more than two editions of a newspaper each week, she adds, while 16 percent access the Internet multiple times in a week and 11 percent do so on a daily basis.

McCluskey predicts new media will become the mainstay of how news is delivered, just as television is now.

“Fifty years ago when television was beginning, we would have seen it as new media. Now we call it traditional media,” he says. “Mobile, digital and computer-based media will be traditional media in the future. We have to have our content there now, so people who are using this new media at the moment [can] grow up with it and continue to use it as time moves forward.” 

News: North Koreans Hack South Korea Online Games to Raise Money

Posted by echa 8:31 PM, under | No comments

Seoul. The North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has found a novel way of raising badly needed cash, according to the South Korean authorities: unleashing young hackers on South Korea's immensely popular online gaming sites to find ways to rack up points convertible to cash.

Despite its decrepit economy, North Korea is believed to train an army of computer programmers and hackers. The police in Seoul said Thursday that four South Koreans and a Korean-Chinese had been arrested on charges of drawing on that army to organize a hacking squad of 30 young video gaming experts.

Working from Northern China, the police said, the squad created software that breached the servers for such popular South Korean online gaming sites as "Lineage" and "Dungeon and Fighter." The breach allowed round-the-clock play by "factories" of dozens of unmanned computers.

Their accumulated gaming points were exchanged for cash at websites where human players are focused on acquiring enhancements for their online personas, or avatars. The gaming software was also sold, the police said; such factories, while illegal, are common in South Korea and China.

In a little less than two years, the police said, the organizers made $6 million. They gave 55 percent of it to the hackers, who forwarded some of it to agents in Pyongyang, North Korea. "They regularly contacted North Korean agents for close consultations," Chung Kil-hwan, a senior officer at the police agency's International Crime Investigation Unit, said during a news briefing.

Chung said the hackers, all graduates of North Korea's elite science universities, were dispatched from two places: the state-run Korea Computer Center in Pyongyang and the Korea Neungnado General Trading Co. The company, he said, reports to a shadowy Communist Party agency called Office 39, which gathers foreign hard currency for Kim through drug trafficking, counterfeiting, arms sales and other illicit activities.

South Korean and U.S. officials say they believe the slush fund is worth billions and that Kim uses it to help finance his nuclear weapons programs and to smuggle Rolex watches and other luxury goods, which he doles out to buy the allegiance of the party and the military elite. Meanwhile, the bulk of his people suffer privation and myriad hardships.

A series of U.N. sanctions imposed after North Korea's nuclear and ballistic missile tests in recent years aim to squeeze the cash flow by curtailing trade with the North Korean companies suspected of illicit activities. They also ban exports of luxury goods to North Korea.

The two Koreas, which have remained technically at war for almost 60 years, operate in an environment of mutual suspicion. The tensions extend to the virtual world: Seoul accused Pyongyang of spreading malicious software that paralyzed the websites of South Korean government agencies and financial institutions in July 2009 and again in March. In May, the South blamed North Korea for an attack that brought down a South Korean bank's network.

North Korea denied responsibility and accused Seoul of inventing a conspiracy.

New York Times

News: Mark Zuckerberg's Sister Leaving Facebook to Start Company

Posted by echa 8:26 PM, under | No comments

Mark Zuckerberg's Sister Leaving Facebook to Start Company  
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO and president of Facebook, heads to have lunch at the Sun Valley Inn during the 2011 Allen and Co. Sun Valley Conference, Thursday, July 7, 2011, in Sun Valley, Idaho (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)



New York. Facebook says Randi Zuckerberg, the sister of CEO Mark Zuckerberg, is leaving the company after six years.

Facebook said Thursday that Zuckerberg, who had led Facebook's consumer marketing team, is leaving to start her own company. Facebook says the company is "grateful for her important service."

Zuckerberg did not immediately respond to an email for comment.

The blog AllThingsD, which earlier reported her departure, says she is leaving to start a company called RtoZ Media. Few details are available on the startup's website, which says RtoZ is still working on "absolutely everything about this new initiative."

The venture will likely build on Zuckerberg's work at Facebook. There, she worked with media companies to bring elections and other current events to the social network.


Associated Press

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