Georgia Tech - Themed Google Searches

Remember that Google Super Bowl search ad that your girlfriends and wives thought was really cute and clever? Well, Google recently unveiled a new widget that allows you to create your own Search Stories ads. You know, a string of related Google searches that are woven together to create a story.
To kick off the long offseason, why not take some time and create your own Georgia Tech-themed Google search story? Leave your videos in the comments section. If we get enough submissions, we might be able to put them to a vote to determine the best GT-related Search Story.

http://www.fromtherumbleseat.com/2010/4/16/1425625/georgia-tech-themed-google-searches

The Next Web Network’s Weekly Recap: Twitter Announces Monetization Plan and New Features at Chirp

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Welcome to The Next Web Network’s Weekly Recap. Make sure to check out this week’s podcast where we discuss the biggest stories of the week. Also, the deadline to grab your tickets to The Next Web Conference 2010 in Amsterdam (April 27 – 29) is fast approaching.
This week was all about Chirp, Twitter’s first official conference. At Chirp Twitter unveiled it’s long awaited monetization strategy as well as a bunch of new product announcements. Google also made a variety of product announcements as well as posting strong Q1 results. This week we also announced the finalists for The Next Web Paypal X Startup Rally 2010.

http://thenextweb.com/2010/04/18/tnw-network-weekly-recap-twitter-chirp-announcements/

Where's Google on net neutrality, FCC role?

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In the past week, Google has been noticeably absent from a growing debate about the future of a net neutrality policy being proposed by the Federal Communications Commission and the agency’s role over broadband services.
Last week, a company spokesperson declined to comment on how it believes the FCC should proceed after a federal court threw the commission’s role over broadband services into doubt. Google has been a leading corporate advocate of net neutrality rules at the FCC.
The company is expected to say more over the following days but has in recent weeks sent mixed messages. On the one hand, media counsel Rick Whitt told the FCC’s general counsel, Austin Schlick, that the agency needed to “build a complete legal and evidentiary record to confirm the agency’s oversight authority, whether under Title I, Title II, Title VI, or other pertinent provisions.”

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/posttech/2010/04/in_the_last_week_google.html

Google buys British tech startup Plink

Google has made its first British acquisition, buying Plink, a company founded four months ago by Oxford University PhD students Mark Cummins and James Philbin.
Plink’s first product is PlinkArt, a visual recognition app for mobile that analyses pictures of well-known artworks and paintings and identifies them. Users can then share the photo with friends and also click through to buy a poster version.
Since launching four months ago, PlinkArt has attracted 50,000 users.
Plink, which was a finalist at Mini Seedcamp London, the competition for European startups, was recently awarded a $100,000 prize from Google after winning a public vote on the best reference app on Android, Google’s mobile platform.

http://realbusiness.co.uk/internet_business/google_buys_british_tech_startup_plink

Companies Slowly Join Cloud-Computing

SAN FRANCISCO — This year, Netflix made what looked like a peculiar choice: the DVD-by-mail company decided that over the next two years, it would move most of its Web technology — customer movie queues, search tools and the like — over to the computer servers of one of its chief rivals, Amazon.com.
Enlarge This Image
Peter DaSilva for The New York Times
Kevin McEntee, vice president of engineering at Netflix, pointing, and Santosh Rau, cloud system manager. Netflix is using Amazon’s network, freeing it to focus on its movie business.
Amazon, like Netflix, wants to deliver movies to people’s homes over the Internet. But the online retailer, based in Seattle, has lately gained traction with a considerably more ambitious effort: the business of renting other companies the remote use of its technology infrastructure so they can run their computer operations. In the parlance of technophiles, they would operate “in the cloud.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/19/technology/19cloud.html?src=me

Google CEO: Tech silence in China spat no shock

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"It has gone as we expected," said Schmidt at a meeting of the American Society of News Editors.
"Google is an unusual company," said Schmidt, adding that other tech firms in Silicon Valley probably had a range of opinions about Google's decision to publicly report hacking attacks, and opting to end its censorship of its Chinese service.
"We were able to make a decision based on principle," he said, adding that he was unsure what the end result would be.
"It is a battle," he said. "We know that there is a reasonably large group of people in China who are seeking non-censored information."

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE63B0E420100412

MAGID ON TECH: Google taking on all tech comers

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Google is busy waging wars on two fronts.
The Mountain View search giant has its sights set on Apple's iPhone in the cell phone market. On the application and operating system front, Microsoft is its main target.
Google's Android cell phone operating system is a direct competitor to Apple's iPhone, and soon Google will be powering tablet PCs that compete with Apple's new iPad. While there are differences between Android and the iPhone operating system, both have a similar look and feel. One major difference today is that Google's OS can run more than one program at a time while the iPhone can only run one program (except for certain Apple applications). This will change, however, as Apple releases its iPhone OS 4.0 update in the summer.
But Apple isn't alone in facing competition from the search giant. Google on Tuesday introduced updates to its Google Docs suite of Web-based programs that make them more compatible and more competitive with Microsoft Office.

http://www.mercurynews.com/peninsula/ci_14877258?nclick_check=1

Google, AMD disappoint investors, push tech stocks lower

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Google and Advanced Micro Devices shares dropped sharply Friday after earnings reports from the Silicon Valley tech companies fell short of investors' high hopes.
Mountain View Internet giant Google finished at $550.31, down $44.99, or 7.6 percent. After the stock markets closed Thursday afternoon, Google reported profit for its most recent quarter of $1.96 billion, up 37 percent year over year. Revenue climbed 23 percent to $6.77 billion.
Even though the results beat Wall Street forecasts, analysts were concerned that Google was increasing spending too quickly. Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette said Google intends to "remain committed to heavy investment in innovation — both to spur future growth in our core and emerging businesses." He said the company has added 800 employees so far this year.

http://www.mercurynews.com/business-headlines/ci_14899037?nclick_check=1

EU Conducts Test Flights To Assess Impact of Volcanic Ash On Aircraft

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"As we discussed on Friday, the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull in Iceland has led to flights being canceled across the EU. With travel chaos ensuing and the airlines losing an estimated $200 million per day, EU authorities are coming under increasing pressure to re-open the airways. Test flights conducted on Saturday were apparently successful, with no problems encountered during flight. Following the test flights, Peter Hartman, CEO of KLM, said, 'We hope to receive permission as soon as possible after that to start up our operation and to transport our passengers to their destinations.' Evidence possibly opposing this move comes from the Finnish Defense Forces, which released photos and a statement after F-18 Hornets flew through the ash cloud, saying, 'Based on the pictures, it was discovered that even short flights in ash dust may cause significant damage to an airplane's engine.' Is it safe to resume flights so soon, or should planes remain grounded until the ash cloud has dissipated?"

http://news.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/1435200/EU-Conducts-Test-Flights-To-Assess-Impact-of-Volcanic-Ash-On-Aircraft

Ubisoft DRM Problems Remain Unsolved

"More than three weeks after the release of The Settlers 7, with the controversial 'always on-line' DRM, a lot of people still can't connect to Ubisoft's DRM servers. The forum threads where people can post if they are unable to connect keep growing daily. One reason for the lack of fixes or responses from support seems to be that the people responsible were on vacation during the Easter holiday, despite the promise of 24/7 monitoring of the servers. The moral of this story seems to be that it is a bad idea to buy a game just before a major holiday."

http://games.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/1452221/Ubisoft-DRM-Problems-Remain-Unsolved

Why Linux Is Not Attracting Young Developers

"Jonathan Corbet recently pointed out at the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit that the Linux kernel team was getting older and not attracting young developers. This article suggests the Linux kernel no longer has the same appeal to young open source developers that it did 10 years ago. Could it be that the massive code base and declining sense of community from corporate involvement has driven young open source programmers elsewhere?"

http://linux.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/1557220/Why-Linux-Is-Not-Attracting-Young-Developers

Newspaper Death Notices May Be a Dying Business

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"Alan D. Mutter writes in his journalism blog 'Relections of a Newsosaur' that some newspapers exploit bereaved families with exorbitantly priced death notices — a distasteful and strategically inept way for them to try to make ends meet. 'I stumbled across the problem this week when I tried to buy a death notice in... the San Francisco Chronicle, which proposed charging $450 for the one-day run of a crappy-looking, 182-word death notice,' writes Mutter. But lose the death notice business, and newspapers risk losing a huge audience driver as well. The solution may be partnering with websites like Legacy.com, a site that already publishes death notices for about two-thirds of the people who die each day in the US. 'It may not be easy to figure out the terms of a broader collaboration, writes Rich Gordon on Poynter.org, 'partly because some newspaper executives are wary of Legacy and feel the company could become a competitive threat for audiences and revenue. But this is exactly the reaction many newspaper executives had to collaborating with Internet companies in other classified advertising categories. I'd hate to see newspapers make the same mistake with death notices and obituaries.'"

http://news.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/1825206/Newspaper-Death-Notices-May-Be-a-Dying-Business

Microbe Mat the Size of Greece Discovered In the Sea

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"A mat of microbes the size of Greece has been discovered on the sea floor off the Pacific coast of South America. 'These tiny creatures can join together to create some of the largest masses of life on the planet... A single liter of seawater, once thought to contain about 100,000 microbes, can actually hold more than one billion microorganisms...'"

http://science.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/1842220/Microbe-Mat-the-Size-of-Greece-Discovered-In-the-Sea

Thoughts On the State of Web Development

"[Three years ago] I was very excited about Apache Wicket as the way to develop line of business applications with a domain model, CRUD [create-read-update-delete] screens for maintaining the model, and in the most interesting cases, doing something else useful besides. I still like Wicket. It has, as its website says a small conceptual surface area.' It reminds me of python in that 'You try something it usually just works.' In many respects, though, Wicket seems to be at the wrong level of abstraction for the for the sorts of line of business applications described above. If your team is spending any time at all writing code to produce listing, filtering, and sorting behavior, not to mention creating CRUD screens and the back end logic for these operations, they are probably working at the wrong level of abstraction. ... Recently I did a small project using Grails and was quite pleased. Grails uses groovy, a dynamic language compatible with Java and is based on the proven technologies that I know and love well: Spring, Hibernate, SiteMesh, Maven, etc. ... I get all the power of the Java ecosystem without the fustiness and lack of expressivity of the core language (no more getters and setters, ever!)."

http://developers.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/2135250/Thoughts-On-the-State-of-Web-Development

Virtualizing Workstations For Common Hardware?

"We have approximately 20 workstations which all have different hardware specs. Every workstation has two monitors and generally runs either Ubuntu or Windows. I had started using Clonezilla to copy the installs so we could deploy new workstations quickly and easily, when we have hardware failures or the like, but am struggling with Windows requiring new drivers to be installed for all new hardware. Obviously we could be booting into Ubuntu and then load a Windows virtual machine after that, but I'd prefer not to have the added load of a full GUI underneath Windows — we want maximum performance possible. And I don't think the multi-monitor support would work. Is it possible to have a very basic virtual machine beneath to provide hardware consistency whilst still allowing multi-monitor support? Does anyone have any experience with a technique like this?"

http://ask.slashdot.org/story/10/04/18/2244215/Virtualizing-Workstations-For-Common-Hardware

Apple win would be boon for AMD: Graphics matter

Apple is reportedly talking with Advanced Micro Devices about using the No. 2 chipmaker’s processors. Simply put, an Apple win would be huge for AMD since its profit margins just can’t keep up with Intel’s at the moment.
AppleInsider reports the following:
AMD reps have been seen talking with Apple;
Apple is working with AMD chips in its labs;
Apple wants to diversify and isn’t happy about Intel design decisions that have hurt the company’s partnership with Nvidia;
Apple may be interested in AMD for its graphics ability and the fusion of CPUs and GPUs.
The AppleInsider report is fascinating in that it shows how Apple may be looking for leverage. An Apple-AMD hookup raises some interesting questions. Among them:

http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=33179

Microsoft looks to turn search into a tech platform, says online biz head

BANGALORE: Microsoft is not only aiming for a higher market share or greater monetisation of its search properties, a segment where it trails market
leader Google by a wide margin. Instead, the world’s largest software firm is trying to turn search into a technology platform, one that helps consumers take complex decisions, says Qi Lu, Microsoft’s head of online business. And the simple way of doing a such thing, says Mr Lu, is to understand user intent behind search. Mr Lu, an Yahoo veteran who was hand-picked by Steve Ballmer to run the Redmond giant’s online services — most importantly, search — was in India to add more muscle to Microsoft’s local R&D efforts and streamline its partnership with Yahoo, which recently got regulatory approval.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/software/Microsoft-looks-to-turn-search-into-a-tech-platform-says-online-biz-head/articleshow/5829981.cms

Leach expands lawsuit to include seven officials

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Attorneys for former Texas Tech coach Mike Leach filed a fourth amended petition Friday claiming the former coach’s firing was predetermined and done so to help the university save money.
In the filing, six Tech officials are being sued individually for damages: Tech Chancellor Kent Hance, Board of Regents members Jerry Turner and Larry Anders, Tech President Guy Bailey, Tech Athletic Director Gerald Myers and Tech Investigator Charlotte Bingham. Craig James, the father of Adam James was also named as a defendant.
One of Leach’s attorneys, Ted Liggett, said Friday that the individuals are being sued — especially Hance, Turner and Anders — because they went “beyond the scope of their job.” Liggett pointed out that it was Bailey and Myers’ responsibility to deal with the Leach situation and no one else should have been involved.
Liggett believes the filings show that Leach’s firing is derived from the contract negotiations last spring.

http://www.dailytoreador.com/news/leach-expands-lawsuit-to-include-seven-officials-1.2230069

What we learned from Tech's spring game

Here are a few thoughts from Saturday's Texas Tech spring game, where the 24-24 tie and much of what happened on the field provided little insight into what will happen on the field.
1. Backup quarterbacks Seth Doege and Jacob Karam did a nice job, combining to complete 47 of 68 passes for 530 yards and five touchdowns on a cold, blustery day. But much of the Tech offensive punch will be determined by the two seniors-to-be that were involved in the pregame coin flip and not much else. Either Taylor Potts (hand injury) and Steven Sheffield (broken foot) will quarterback the Red Raiders this season. "There's going to be a lot of competition," new head coach Tommy Tuberville said. "The best guy will be our starting quarterback. When you have two senior quarterbacks, it it's a great thing to happen. Both of them have experience and know how to win games. We want to have the guy who can move the ball the best and have the other guy come out of the bullpen."

http://collegesportsblog.dallasnews.com/archives/2010/04/what-we-learned-from-techs-spring-game.html

Glenrose hospital acquires high tech virtual reality system for rehabilitation

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EDMONTON — Edmonton will soon be home to a state-of-the-art virtual reality rehabilitation system for injured soldiers and other patients, one of only two sites in Canada with such technology.
The Department of National Defence will spend $1.5 million on a computer-assisted rehabilitation environment (CAREN) system for the Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital.
The system should be operational by early 2011 and will serve Western Canada. A CAREN at the Ottawa Hospital Rehabilitation Centre, also to be installed this year, will serve the eastern part of the country.

http://www.edmontonjournal.com/news/Glenrose+hospital+acquires+CAREN+system/2922062/story.html

Hokies rally to stun Cavs

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Just a strike away from sweeping its in-state rival, Virginia fans rose to their feet Sunday at Davenport Field.
That, however, was as close as weekend perfection would come for a sellout crowd that sat stunned as a would-be win evaporated.
Twentieth-ranked Virginia Tech scored five runs in the ninth inning to mount an improbable comeback and register an 8-5 victory over the Cavaliers.

http://www2.dailyprogress.com/cdp/sports/cavalier_insider/ci_baseball/article/hokies_rally_to_stun_cavs/55084/

Agent: Teams aware of Dwyer's history

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Georgia Tech running back Jonathan Dwyer tested positive at the NFL scouting combine for amphetamines, FoxSports.com reported Sunday, but Dwyer's agent said teams were aware of his client's medical history.
"All 32 teams received notification prior to the combine that a medication he's taken since childhood would likely result in a positive result at the combine," Adisa Bakari told ESPN's Joe Schad. "We provided the necessary medical documentation."
The NFL calls Dwyer's situation a "therapeutic use exemption," a source told Schad. The type of medication he has taken was not identified.

http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/draft10/news/story?id=5111130

Shooting Of Virginia Tech

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Virginia – - The third anniversary of the Virginia tech shooting that took place three years back on the sixteenth of April 2007.
The Virginia tech shooting took place at the campus of the Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. The shooting consisted of two consecutive attacks followed by a gap of two hours. The culprit killed thirty two students at the campus and injured twenty five people. It was one of the deadliest campus shootings in the United States history of university crimes. The Culprit Seung hui had a anxiety disorder. He was a student at the Virginia Tech University after graduating from High School. The state university wasn’t given any medical record of the student due to a privacy law. He was accused of stalking 2 female students and was declared mentally ill by the justice. He was ordered to have a special treatment for his illness.

http://www.twominutenews.com/2010/world/us-world/shooting-of-virginia-tech-8198.html

Okla. coach: 1st inning a key in 8-3 loss to Tech

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Oklahoma starter Jeremy Erben gave up seven runs on 10 hits and a walk in 3 1/3 innings on the mound as Texas Tech topped the Sooners 8-3.
With the loss Sunday, Oklahoma (26-10, 6-7 Big 12) falls behind Texas Tech (20-19, 8-7) in the conference standings, with the Red Raiders now in sole possession of third place.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/APStories/stories/D9F5PE6O2.html

Georgia Tech Sweeps Clemson

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ATLANTA -- Georgia Tech scored in all eight of their innings at the plate on the way to an 11-3 routing of Clemson Sunday. Its the 5th straight loss for the Tigers.
Kyle Parker tied the game in the top of the second with solo home run over the right field fence. It was his 14th home run of the season.
The Yellow Jackets responded by scoring four runs in the bottom half of the inning, and one run every inning for the rest of the game.

http://www.midlandsconnect.com/sports/story.aspx?id=445309

Connecting the Dots With Online Healthcare Resources

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More than half of Americans turn to the Internet for some form of health advice or information, and research finds that most would also like to use a secure Internet site to access medical records, schedule office visits, refill prescriptions and pay medical bills. What's needed now is a healthcare hub -- the behind-the-scenes technology and architecture that aggregates the details of our health.
As our lives grow more connected and more complicated, we strive to manage the influx of information and detail that consumes our daily living. In our everyday life, handling work, bills, family schedules and more is a daunting task even for those with exceptional organizational skills. For those of us whose talents lie elsewhere, we're out of luck.
Now imagine attempting to organize and manage your health and health records. Those of us with chronic conditions or who are caregivers for loved ones are already engaged in this battle.

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Connecting-the-Dots-With-Online-Healthcare-Resources-69786.html

Cloud Browse Flash App Is OK With Apple

If you want to view Flash video on your iPad or iPhone, there is now an option available on iTunes that apparently has Apple's blessing -- or at least has not yet received the curse of its rejection. Cloud browse works just fine, according to Today in iPhone's Rob Walch, who tested it earlier -- but as of Thursday afternoon, the app was temporarily out of commission due to server maintenance issues.
The widening chasm between Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Adobe (Nasdaq: ADBE) has inspired a number of third-party companies to develop bridges to cross the divide -- that is, workarounds that will let iPad and iPhone users view videos created using Adobe's Flash technology.

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Cloud-Browse-Flash-App-Is-OK-With-Apple-69787.html

That Was The Week That Was in Online Journalism

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The Seattle Times won a Pulitzer Prize this week for its coverage of the murder of four police officers and the manhunt that followed. The team there provided its top-notch coverage with the help of new digital communications technologies that haven't yet won the trust many old-school journalists. In the hands of reporters and editors who know how to use them, though, they're clearly powerful tools.
At the risk of giving Samuel Clemens/Mark Twain one more reason to do 360s in his grave, I'm compelled to modify one of his best-known quotes: It seems reports of journalism's demise at the hands of technology have been greatly exaggerated.
The evidence piled up this week. Awards were announced, new business models launched, constructive criticism heaved at established news brands, and that dastardly new media even tried to give an assist to journalists trying to make sense of a Twittering, blogging world. All of it involved recognition that the mother of all mashups is underway in the news industry thanks to digital technologies. And while that's going on, it appeared that life is indeed progressing as usual, the democracy remains intact and dogs and cats are still living apart (thanks, Ghostbusters, for that last obligatory pop culture reference.)

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/That-Was-The-Week-That-Was-in-Online-Journalism-69784.html

Obama on Space Exploration: We've Got to Be Smart

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Responding to a hail of criticism over his decision to end the Constellation program to return to the moon, President Obama told NASA employees on Thursday that no one is more committed to manned space exploration than he is, and that he expects to see humans land on Mars within his lifetime.
President Obama on Thursday delivered a major speech at the John F. Kennedy Space Center in Florida about his vision for human spaceflight in the coming years, affirming that he is "100 percent committed to the mission of NASA and its future."
As part of a US$6 billion increase in NASA's budget over the next five years, the president aims to increase exploration of the solar system , as well as make more Earth-based observations designed to help humans protect the environment.

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Obama-on-Space-Exploration-Weve-Got-to-Be-Smart-69790.html

Google Dreams Up Cloud Printing Service

Google Labs has revealed details about its Cloud Print project, which would allow all kinds of applications on various devices print to any Web-connected computer. The project's still in development -- part of the process relies on what Google calls "cloud-aware printers," which will need to be built with special technology Google's still working on.
Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) on Friday announced that it's working on Google Cloud Print, a service that will let any application on any device print to any printer over the Internet.
Instead of relying on the device's local operating system and drivers to print a job, applications will use Google Cloud Print to submit and manage print jobs. Google Cloud Print will then send the print jobs to the appropriate printer and provide information on the job status to the application.

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Google-Dreams-Up-Cloud-Printing-Service-69793.html

Twitter's New Flight Plan

Twitter has decided it's time to leave the nest and take flight with a new ad-centric business model. Can the little microblogging service that could maintain good relations with its developers? Or are new rivals -- or partners -- just around the corner? Meanwhile, the public met Microsoft's next of Kin, the FCC met with Congress, and Apple met devs' wrath.
To their credit, Twitter's executives are self-aware enough to know the company has been living sort of like a trust-fund child well past its metaphorical college days. Every startup needs some time in the cradle, of course, but when you're hosting 50 million messages per day and you still don't have a revenue plan, questions start getting kind of pointed. This is not lost on cofounder Biz Stone. He recently wrote on the company blog, "Believe me, when your name is Biz and you're a cofounder of Twitter, it also means putting yourself at the mercy of folks like Stephen Colbert who hit home runs with lines like, 'So, I assume that 'Biz' in 'Biz Stone' does not stand for 'Business Model.'"

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Twitters-New-Flight-Plan-69796.html

Let the Rich Internet App Battle Begin

It was a big week for Rich Internet Applications. Adobe's Creative Suite 5 and Microsoft's Visual Studio 2010, as well as its Silverlight 4, all lend momentum to the drive to move RIAs off the browser. The platforms have sharpened new methodologies for designing simpler client-side Web apps that maintain data on stronger server-side apps.
In recent years, most Web applications in widespread use have been developed with Web browsers as their platform. Here, one imagines Java advocates are already composing their complaint letters. But with Web resources bound to URLs, for most developers, it's made sense to utilize the functionality most commonly associated with URL-bound resources: HTML, JavaScript, and now its rapidly maturing derivative, Ajax.

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Let-the-Rich-Internet-App-Battle-Begin-69789.html?wlc=1271647473

AP source: Toyota to agree to $16.4 million fine

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WASHINGTON – Toyota Motor Corp. is expected to agree to a fine of more than $16 million, the largest government penalty levied against an automaker, for a four-month delay in telling federal authorities about defective gas pedals on its vehicles, a Transportation Department official said Sunday.
Toyota faces a Monday deadline to accept or contest the $16.4 million fine over evidence it knew about sticking gas pedals in September but did not issue a recall until January.
The Transportation official was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity. The official said Toyota is expected to pay the full amount of the assessed fine within 30 days as a means of avoiding going to court against the government.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100419/ap_on_bi_ge/us_toyota_recall

European airlines test skies, press to end ban

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AMSTERDAM – Major airlines that sent test flights into European air space found no damage Sunday from the volcanic ash that has paralyzed aviation over the continent, raising pressure on governments to ease restrictions that have thrown global travel and commerce into chaos.
Is it safe to fly yet? Airline officials and some pilots say the passengerless test flights show that it is. Meteorologists warn that the skies over Europe remain unstable from an Icelandic volcano that continues to spew ash capable of knocking out jet engines.
European Union officials said air traffic could return to half its normal level on Monday if the dense cloud begins to dissipate. Germany allowed some flights to resume.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100419/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_iceland_volcano

Fee-weary air travelers get a break — for now

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ATLANTA – U.S. airlines never met a fee they didn't like. Until now, it seems.
Five major carriers on Sunday agreed not to follow the lead of a small Florida airline that plans to charge for carryon bags. Their commitment comes just in time to keep travelers from running for the exits during the peak summer flying season, but it is doubtful that it marks a change in strategy.
Airlines are going to tack on every fee they feel they can get away with because it bolsters their revenue stream while allowing them to keep base fares lower. They just don't feel like passengers will tolerate losing their sacred free carryons — at least not right now.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100419/ap_on_bi_ge/us_airlines_bag_fees

Carrie Underwood wins ACM Entertainer of the Year

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LAS VEGAS – Carrie Underwood made history at the Academy of Country Music Awards on Sunday night, becoming the first woman to win entertainer of the year twice.
Underwood won the show's top honor last year. This year, she beat out Taylor Swift, Kenny Chesney, the Zac Brown Band, Toby Keith, Brad Paisley, George Strait and Keith Urban.
Top-selling trio Lady Antebellum were the dominant winners, grabbing five trophies, including song and single record of the year for crossover hit "Need You Now," while also snapping Rascal Flatts' seven-year run as best vocal group.
"We are having a blast tonight," singer Charles Kelly told the crowd after win No. 4. "We love you all. We will never forget this night."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100419/ap_on_en_mu/us_acm_awards

Magic squeak out Game 1 win over Bobcats

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ORLANDO, Fla. – Jameer Nelson scored 24 of his 32 points in the first half, and the Orlando Magic nearly blew a 22-point lead before beating the Charlotte Bobcats 98-89 in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series Sunday.
Rashard Lewis added 19 points, and Dwight Howard had nine blocks but was limited offensively and in foul trouble for most of the second half.
Gerald Wallace had 25 points, and Stephen Jackson played through a hyperextended left knee to finish with 18 points in the Bobcats' first playoff game in franchise history.
Game 2 in the best-of-seven series is Wednesday night in Orlando.
Charlotte swarmed and slapped Howard on every opportunity near the rim to frustrate the Magic's All-Star center. Howard had five points and seven rebounds, and was 1 for 6 on free throws.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100419/ap_on_sp_bk_ga_su/bkn_bobcats_magic

Flyers beat Devils 3-2 in OT

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PHILADELPHIA – He usually hears cheers from Flyers fans after another fight has riled them up.
Buried under a pile of his teammates with nothing to see but a blur orange jerseys, Daniel Carcillo never heard noise like what vibrated throughout the arena. Carcillo, a fighter with squatters rights on the penalty box, morphed from puncher to postseason star with the biggest goal of his career.
Carcillo scored 3:35 into overtime to give the Philadelphia Flyers a 3-2 victory over the New Jersey Devils on Sunday night and a 2-1 advantage in the Eastern Conference series.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100419/ap_on_sp_ho_ga_su/hkn_devils_flyers

School Allegedly Spied Via Web Cams

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Web cams in school-issued laptops allegedly photographed students at home.

http://news.yahoo.com/video/us-15749625/school-allegedly-spied-via-web-cams-19196035

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