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Review all! Beauty Product Tips, Cosmetic Skin care and Make up Tips & Hairstyle Advice. Project of www.US.am
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 Here we are, a year after the launch of G80, and we are seeing what amounts to the first real "refresh" part. Normally, we see a n >>> |
 Yosemite Technologies is launching FileKeeper Professional, a file protection and recovery software solution for laptop and deskto >>> |
 Sun Microsystems has added a risk simulation and pricing service to its Network.com on-demand grid computing service. The on-de >>> |
 Virtualization is a hot topic by any measure, and the security world has not escaped healthy debates and new discoveries from rese >>> |
 Think mind games are only for dating and creepy movies? Think again. According to researchers at McAfee, a new study shows that >>> |
 It's been quite awhile since we last brought you a good look at anything having to do with a networking component but we're workin >>> | |
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LAS VEGAS--Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates wowed a full house Sunday in his 12th and last Consumer Electronics Show keynote as a full-time employee with the company he founded more than three decades ago.
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It wasn't long after Google announced its long-anticipated mobile plans this week that a debate emerged about the prospective security of the project's Linux-based platform. Can the open-source model for the platform, now known as Android, produce secure code? Will phones based on Android, dubbed "Gphones" by many, be more or less secure than Apple's iPhone, which has been developed using proprietary software? What will Android's developers be able to do to stop authors of malicious code from capitalizing on its openness?
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The new edition gives Microsoft Office a run for its money on the Mac desktop. Step aside Microsoft Office for Mac, there's a new software suite in town.
Apple Inc. has released its new iWork ‘08 office suite, aimed at the traditional Microsoft Office Mac user, including its all-new Numbers spreadsheet tool program.
Included in the new iWork suite, which retails at $79, are Keynote, Pages and Numbers, three programs designed for the home office and business user. Alternatively, a family pack of iWork can also be purchased for only $99 and includes up to five household licences.
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Yosemite Technologies is launching FileKeeper Professional, a file protection and recovery software solution for laptop and desktop computers that sets a new standard for ease-of-use. Individual users at home or in the office can now implement a straightforward data protection solution with intuitive features including recovery of previous versions of a file or deleted files with a simple right click of their mouse in the Microsoft Windows user interface.
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Almost 40 solar vehicles are racing through Australia
The World Solar Challenge sun-powered car race started yesterday with 37 solar vehicles created by 61 teams from 20 nations racing into the Australian outback. Thousands of spectators watched as participants started the trek to Adelaide from the Northern Territory of Darwin, a 3,000-km journey that takes several days.
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Reports that security researchers are running scared from hackers responsible for the Storm trojan are overblown, say some of the people who have dug into the complex malware. Last week Josh Corman of IBM's Internet Security Systems said that Storm, a multifaceted Trojan Horse that has been used to gather a substantial army of bots (or compromised computers), strikes back using distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks when it senses probes of its command-and-control network. These attacks, Corman said, have researchers spooked.
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Warburtons has gone live with a mobile platform that is enabling its BlackBerry-toting managers to approve purchase orders on the move, thereby cutting out a crucial bottleneck in its processes. The firm, which distributes more than 2 million bakery products a day from its thirteen bakeries and eleven depots, said the tool meant orders were no longer being held up by senior managers being unable to sign off new orders only when in the office.
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It's been quite awhile since we last brought you a good look at anything having to do with a networking component but we're working hard to change that. Today we'll be sharing our thoughts and feelings on TRENDnet's newest wireless router, the TEW-633GR, which promises to bring blazing-fast, next-generation Draft-N (802.11n draft 2.0) transmission speeds (up to 300Mbps), along with advanced encryption and security protocols to your home or small office network - all while providing the range and reliability you've come to expect from a premium component.
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T-Mobile USA announces the upcoming availability of the T-Mobile Shadow – the first phone in a planned franchise of phones under the Shadow brand. Available beginning October 31, the T-Mobile Shadow is designed to significantly reduce the complexity often associated with many feature-rich devices, while maintaining all the powerful calling, messaging and picture sharing capabilities people crave to keep them connected. For years, T-Mobile has been pioneering new products and services designed to reduce the complexity of staying connected to important people. This effort began years ago with the introduction of the T-Mobile Sidekick family of devices, designed to make calling, texting and instant messaging much easier just as young adults were beginning to embrace these new forms of communication.
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Faster Wi-Fi will means we CAN do away with Ethernet access, according to results seen by Craig Mathias. I get asked this question a lot: With the advent of 802.11n, might it now be feasible to build the all-wireless enterprise? That is, can we replace our wired networks with wireless and provision multiple services, primarily voice and data but perhaps video and more, on the wireless LAN? Are we now talking about not just the augmentation of the wired plant, but rather its replacement?I recently observed a few experiments in an attempt to answer these questions, and the results were quite encouraging. But let me cut to the chase. No, we're not talking about the total replacement of all wire, just the wire at the edge of the LAN, where it meets the user. It's amazing how much wire is required for wireless, and with one small exception, that's not going to change. But for most users, yes, we're going all-wireless, and yes, we have the technology to make it happen today.
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