20100316

Win Phone 7 Ditches Multitasking, Memory Cards

Shared by Bill
and cutting off memory cards... are they stupid?
This article from PC mag talks of an interview with Charlie Kindel, WP7S development head honcho. He describes WM7S as a "much more controlled, consumer experience". "Microsoft iPhone" ahoy?

Quote:

LAS VEGAS – The new Windows Phone 7 platform will avoid multitasking third-party apps, nix support for user-replaceable memory cards, and demand that all apps be installed from Windows Phone Marketplace, a Microsoft executive said Monday.
Charlie Kindel, who is in charge of Microsoft's Windows Phone developer strategy, described a much more controlled, iPhone-like experience for formerly freewheeling Microsoft in an interview at the MIX10 conference here.
Microsoft needed to exercise some control to provide a great set of consumer experiences, Kindel said. And notice that word "consumer" – Microsoft isn't offering much to enterprise IT folks with this release of Windows Phone 7. This is a consumer device.
Like the iPhone, Windows Phone 7 won't support third-party apps being able to run in the background. But third parties will get access to a wider range of services than are available on the iPhone. For instance, Pandora could stream in the background using a special background-music service, Kindel said. But VoIP apps will be limited; there won't be a service to allow third-party apps to access telephony in the background.
Microsoft doesn't have anything against background processing – they just need to find a way to do it that doesn't kill responsiveness and battery life. They're still working on the issue, Kindel said.
"Apps that run arbitrarily in the background create an end user experience where battery life and responsiveness of the system becomes … inconsistent," Kindel said. "We focused on getting a set of experiences right where we didn't have to support [multitasking,] but we will over time."
Those third-party apps will all have to be installed from Microsoft's own Marketplace, Kindel said. Initially, there won't even be a way for enterprise customers to deploy apps to their staffs, but Microsoft is working on one. Microsoft may sweeten the deal for developers with lower fees to submit apps to the Marketplace, but the details haven't been worked out.
"We are revamping a lot of the marketplace policies, [and] we have a real desire to make sure that for developers, getting started is cheap and easy," Kindel said.
Windows Phone 7s won't support user-replaceable memory cards, Kindel said. Microsoft will work with OEMs to make sure that phones have enough storage for media and 3D games, but there will be no MicroSD cards for your music. Some phones could have a MicroSD locked under the battery, but it won't be user-replaceable.
Kindel refused to confirm whether or not any future Windows Mobile 6.5 phones would be upgradeable to Windows Phone 7, saying Microsoft was focusing on the new platform, but he said that developers aren't crying over the transition. Rather, they're thrilled with the ease of use and power of the new Windows Phone 7 developer tools, he said.
"When I talk about the fact that we're breaking backwards compatibility, I get applause," he said.
The first Windows Phone 7 devices will come out during "the holidays" of 2010, Kindel confirmed.
Original story here.
http://bit.ly/dmxOxA

20100315

Official announcements from Microsoft about Windows Phone 7 Series from MIX10 !!!

Here's some interesting news about W7 Mobile from the Mix:

So, here it goes:
  • free developer tools for making XNA and Silverlight apps for Windows Phone 7 Series = .NET-only development what means: source code of these apps can be easily decoded
  • several partners announced that will be making apps for Windows Phone 7 Series, including EA Mobile - the huge game maker, and also Microsoft's own Microsoft Game Studios
  • Silverlight apps running in Windows Phone 7 Series have access to accelerometer, camera, microphone, multitouch
  • Windows Phone 7 Series Emulator will be included with tools too, but not clear when it will be available
  • Marketplace for Windows Phone 7 Series apps announced
To learn more, visit original source of this story about Windows Phone 7 Series announcements.

SOURCE
http://bit.ly/aQvHhc

French village went insane after CIA spiked its bread with LSD

For 50 years, residents of the French village of Pont-Saint-Esprit have tried to understand the "cursed bread" incident, a moment of terrifying mass insanity and hallucinations that left at least five dead and dozens in asylums. Now the mystery is solved: the CIA secretly spiked the bread from the bakery with enormous quantities of LSD as part of its cold war mind-control experiments, at least according to recently uncovered documents. The allegation originates with H P Albarelli Jr., an investigative journalist who uncovered the documents while researching his forthcoming book, A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA's Secret Cold War Experiments.
One man tried to drown himself, screaming that his belly was being eaten by snakes. An 11-year-old tried to strangle his grandmother. Another man shouted: "I am a plane", before jumping out of a second-floor window, breaking his legs. He then got up and carried on for 50 yards. Another saw his heart escaping through his feet and begged a doctor to put it back. Many were taken to the local asylum in strait jackets...

Scientists at Fort Detrick told him that agents had sprayed LSD into the air and also contaminated "local foot products".

Mr Albarelli said the real "smoking gun" was a White House document sent to members of the Rockefeller Commission formed in 1975 to investigate CIA abuses. It contained the names of a number of French nationals who had been secretly employed by the CIA and made direct reference to the "Pont St. Esprit incident." In its quest to research LSD as an offensive weapon, Mr Albarelli claims, the US army also drugged over 5,700 unwitting American servicemen between 1953 and 1965.

French bread spiked with LSD in CIA experiment (Thanks, Steve and everyone else who suggested this!)

(Image: Shaw's French Bread, a Creative Commons Attribution photo from Adam Pieniazek's photostream)



http://bit.ly/ag3jDi

20100314

ASP.NET MVC 2 Released

ASP.NET MVC 2 is out. This means, it's released. It's final. Use it. Love it.

You can download it directly, or install it (and whatever else you like) with the Web Platform Installer:

image

ScottGu has many details in his post. There's lots of resources to check out:

If you have questions or problems with any of the samples, please post your comments on the MVC Forum

Enjoy!



© 2010 Scott Hanselman. All rights reserved.

http://bit.ly/aq6xNO

20100311

1024-bit RSA encryption cracked by carefully starving CPU of electricity

Since 1977, RSA public-key encryption has protected privacy and verified authenticity when using computers, gadgets and web browsers around the globe, with only the most brutish of brute force efforts (and 1,500 years of processing time) felling its 768-bit variety earlier this year. Now, three eggheads (or Wolverines, as it were) at the University of Michigan claim they can break it simply by tweaking a device's power supply. By fluctuating the voltage to the CPU such that it generated a single hardware error per clock cycle, they found that they could cause the server to flip single bits of the private key at a time, allowing them to slowly piece together the password. With a small cluster of 81 Pentium 4 chips and 104 hours of processing time, they were able to successfully hack 1024-bit encryption in OpenSSL on a SPARC-based system, without damaging the computer, leaving a single trace or ending human life as we know it. That's why they're presenting a paper at the Design, Automation and Test conference this week in Europe, and that's why -- until RSA hopefully fixes the flaw -- you should keep a close eye on your server room's power supply.

1024-bit RSA encryption cracked by carefully starving CPU of electricity originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Mar 2010 02:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Register, TechWorld  |  sourceUniversity of Michigan  | Email this | Comments http://bit.ly/aCec97

How to Teach Yourself Programming

ars_longa_vita_brevis

Seriously, why is everyone in such a rush?


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20100306

Kohctpyktop: a game for engineers

Kohctpyktop: engineer of the people, by Zachtronics Industries is the first game where you have to design integrated circuits as a challenge. You play the role of an chip designer and you have to design chips using metal, n and p dopped silicon. Check it out. [via]

Kohctpyktop: a game for engineers - [Link]

http://bit.ly/9o15mu

Firefox Feedly RSS option

If you use Firefox with a RSS button and want the default RSS page to offer a Feedly option here is what you need to do: go to the about:c...