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New Zealand Geek - news page 37

Geek - a peculiar or otherwise odd person, especially one who is perceived to be overly intellectual.

Google promises better privacy for search and Street View

BRUSSELS - Google said that it is halving the amount of time it keeps users' search details, cutting the time from 18 months to nine to meet European Union privacy demands.

Peter Fleischer, Google's global privacy adviser, told reporters the change would apply to Google's sites worldwide. Google introduced an 18-month limit in 2007.
September 10, 2008

Steve Jobs defies health rumours at iPod launch

It has been the talk of the blogosphere for months. Occasional bursts of speculation even sent Apple's shares plunging.

So when Steve Jobs, Apple's chief executive and genius-in-residence strolled on to a San Francisco stage yesterday, a sigh of relief went up around Silicon Valley.
September 10, 2008

Possible legal challenge to Google-Yahoo deal

SAN FRANCISCO - Yahoo's plans to boost its profits in an online advertising partnership with rival Google could be moving into the crosshairs of the US Justice Department, which has hired an antitrust litigator to review evidence for a possible legal challenge to the deal.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the attorney is Sanford Litvack, a former vice chairman at Walt Disney and chief of the Justice Department's antitrust division during the Carter administration.
September 10, 2008

Internet acting star in fresh web project

New Zealand actress Jessica Lee Rose, two years ago hailed as the biggest star on the internet, has returned in a new project .

The former Mt Maunganui student, who developed a huge internet following as Lonelygirl15, has returned to the internet after appearing in the failed Lindsay Lohan film, I Know Who Killed Me.
September 10, 2008

Apple unveils new iPods, Jobs not dead

SAN FRANCISCO - Apple CEO Steve Jobs took the wraps off a revamped line of iPods and trumpeted a truce with NBC Universal that means the TV network will begin selling programs again on iTunes.

The iPod announcements were largely expected, and investors were less than energized, sending Apple's shares down $6.13, or 3.9 per cent, to $151.79 in afternoon trading.
September 10, 2008

Businessman convicted of hacking into old firm

A Gisborne businessman has been convicted of fraud after hacking into the computer system of the company he founded and later sold.

Blair Purcell, 48, was found guilty of accessing Gisborne Financial Services (GFS) electronic mail dishonestly, obtaining information and material with no right, obtaining another person's password, and causing the computer system to deny services to an authorised user.
September 10, 2008

Michael Dell buys $US100 million of Dell shares

DALLAS- Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Inc, bought about US$100 ($150.92) million of the computer maker's stock last week, his second such buying spree in the past three months.

Shares in the world's second-largest maker of personal computers are trading near their 52-week low.
September 09, 2008

Kiwi company takes flight in simulator world

A Christchurch-based company has sold its first professional flight simulator for training pilots to fly large passenger aircraft, and is optimistic many more sales will follow.

Modelled on the Boeing 737-800, the flight simulator would be deployed by Dubai Aerospace Enterprise Flight Academy as part of its airline-focused pilot training programme, developer Pacific Simulators said today.
September 09, 2008

IT gets the chop as economies slow

NEW YORK - Many large companies, especially those in the financial services, utilities and telecommunications industries, have cut their technology budgets this year because of the economic slowdown.

In a report that was due to be released, Forrester Research Inc. found that 43 per cent of large US and European businesses it surveyed have cut their overall spending on technology products and services in 2008. Some companies, meanwhile, have put discretionary spending on hold and others are planning to negotiate lower rates for information-technology services.
September 09, 2008

Govt data review forces privacy re-think

After finding that 19 of 46 Government data matching programmes transferred unencrypted information, measures are now being beefed up to ensure better security.

Government agencies have stepped up IT security measures by using encryption when transferring data, following a review of the processes in February.
September 09, 2008

Microsoft plays catch up with Zune Wi-Fi

NEW YORK - Microsoft says it is updating its Zune digital media player so the product can wirelessly download and stream songs when users have access to Wi-Fi networks.

Free updates to the device's software and firmware, as well as more capacious hard drive-based and flash memory-based models, are set to be available in the US on Sept. 16.
September 09, 2008

Google reigns as world's most powerful 10-year-old

MOUNTAIN VIEW - When Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded Google on Sept. 7, 1998, they had little more than their ingenuity, four computers and an investor's $100,000 bet on their belief that an internet search engine could change the world.

It sounded preposterous 10 years ago, but look now: Google draws upon a gargantuan computer network, nearly 20,000 employees and a $150 billion market value to redefine media, marketing and technology.
September 09, 2008

Electronic ink shows print's not dead, says Esquire

NEW YORK - Although readers keep shifting to the internet, Esquire magazine's editor is sure print isn't dying, and he aims to prove by unveiling a 75th-anniversary issue with a cover that features electronic ink.

"For the last couple of years I've been in search of ways to do something that shows that print is a particularly vital product," said Esquire magazine's editor-in-chief, David Granger. "I really do think that print is the most exciting and rewarding medium there is."
September 09, 2008

Anger at 7-hour London Stock Exchange computer crash

LONDON - Trading on The London Stock Exchange was halted for seven hours on Monday - the bulk of the usual session - angering customers unable to do business on what was expected to have been one of the busiest days of the year.

Traders' woes were further compounded when technical glitches also hit the London platform of the U.S.-based ICE commodities electronic exchange - over-the-counter trading and futures trading were both suspended for around an hour.
September 09, 2008

Old online story sends airline shares plummeting

CHICAGO - An old story about United Airlines' 2002 bankruptcy filing resurfaced on a newspaper website on Monday, pummeling its shares before trading was halted.

United blamed the drop on the appearance of an old Chicago Tribune story on the website of the South Florida Sun Sentinel. Both are owned by Tribune.
September 09, 2008


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