Archive for August, 2009
Google links Apps to Groups for quicker sharing
Google has linked its online applications suite with its Groups service, making it possible to share documents, sites, and calendars among defined groups of people.
Before the new functionality was launched Monday, Google Apps users wanting to share items had either to make them entirely public, or share them on a person-by-person basis.
The change means that, for example, a spreadsheet shared with a Google Group will be accessible immediately to anyone joining that group, or rendered inaccessible to those leaving the group.
Full Story…
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10311808-2.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
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CNETNews Google links Apps to Groups for quicker sharing http://bit.ly/S0F1l
Why Twitter isn’t pointless babble
Have you ever sat in a bar or a coffee shop, just watching what people do, examining the expressions on their faces, or just desperately trying to overhear the endearing nonsense that emerges from their mouths?
That’s how I think of Twitter.
Except there is one small difference with this peculiar little microblogging site: you can control who is in the bar or the coffee shop.
Some extremely clever people at Pear Analytics declared last week that 40% of tweets are “pointless babble”. However, might their analysis be, as the English enjoy saying, just a little pear-shaped?
Some people might view, say, reality television as pointless. Yet for others it reveals aspects of humanity that can enlighten far more than many a drama.
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http://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-10311596-71.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
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CNETNews Why Twitter isn’t pointless babble http://bit.ly/66BBm
Here come the ‘Twitter, we did it first’ lawsuits
One of the issues when you create something simple, easy to use, and phenomenally popular is that there will invariably be some folks who come along and say that it was their idea first.
Naturally, that’s started to happen to Twitter. Earlier this month, a patent lawsuit was filed against Twitter on behalf of a Texas-based company called TechRadium, which has a patent to “allow a group administrator or ‘message author’ to originate a single message that will be delivered simultaneously via multiple communication gateways to members of a group of ‘message subscribers’ over e-mail, text message, or another platform.
More specifically, TechRadium’s technology has been applied to a product called Iris, which is designed to be able to send out mass messages for emergency response purposes. The lawsuit claims that Twitter’s service amounts to “offering for sale or use, or selling or using these products without license or authority from TechRadium.”
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CNETNews Here come the Twitter ‘we did it first’ lawsuits http://bit.ly/3KesC
Helicopter in Hudson River crash not initially visible on radar, federal officials say
HOBOKEN — Federal safety officials investigating a midair collision over the Hudson River changed their account of the accident on a key point today, saying an air tour helicopter struck by a small plane wasn’t initially visible on radar to an air traffic controller handling the plane.
The National Transportation Safety Board had previously said the controller failed to warn the plane’s pilot of the potential for a collision with several aircraft in its path, including the helicopter, before handing off responsibility for the plane to another airport.
Full coverage from The Star-Ledger
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http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2009/08/helicopter_in_hudson_river_cra.html
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NJ_News Helicopter in Hudson River crash not initially visible on radar, federal officials say http://bit.ly/UZUOG
Gmail push on iPhone? Meet GPush
The arrival of push notification in Apple’s 3.0 iPhone software whipped up excitement, though its real-world application still left users wanting more. On Monday, Tiverias Apps released GPush (iTunes link), a small (0.3MB), ninety nine cent application that fills in a gap with push notification for your Gmail account.
GPush alerts you to incoming Gmail messages with a red icon badge, a chime, and a semi-transparent alert window that reads the sender’s name and the subject line. (You can change these in the Notification settings.) The application interface itself does little, apart from collecting your login information once, and manually reregistering your credentials. All the rest works behind the scenes.
Full Story…
http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-19512_7-10311287-233.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
Source :
CNETNews Gmail push on iPhone? Meet GPush http://bit.ly/YdVJH