Today, Larry King told the world he will be ending his long-running CNN show, Larry King Live.
“It’s time to hang up the nightly suspenders,” the famous host announced.
Larry King Live holds the Guinness World Record for the…
Today, Larry King told the world he will be ending his long-running CNN show, Larry King Live.
“It’s time to hang up the nightly suspenders,” the famous host announced.
Larry King Live holds the Guinness World Record for the…
Today, the PlayStation 3 received its most substantial update in months. The most talked-about new feature is the long-awaited PlayStation Plus premium online service, but there are other features wrapped up in version 3.40 as well.
First…
According to documents leaked to Boy Genius Report today, AppleCare representatives are being given a strong company line to deliver to unhappy iPhone 4 owners who complain about reception issues.
Employees are told to say that the device’s reception…
Well that didn’t take long. Halfway into their big 15 importers in 15 days campaign, Posterous has managed to make one of their competitors very angry. Twitpic is so angry, in fact, that they’re blocking the service and threatening legal action.
This morning, Posterous introduced their new “Rescue your photos from TwitPic” tool — a one-click way to import your photos from Twitpic over to your Posterous blog. This is the same type of importer Posterous has already made for Ning, Vox, Tumblr and a host of other services — as I said, they’re about halfway through the 15 of these tools they intend to make.
A group of MIT researchers has demonstrated a method of network topology that could render the Internet 100 or even 1000 times faster than it is today.
The “magic” behind the concept is to eliminate or reduce the…
An emotionally charged outgoing student avowed to bring good name to her
alma mater by making high quality screen product and asserted that she
is proud to be an alumnus of Asian Academy of Film & Television.
Various skill development programmes…
Between the iPad’s blocking of Flash earlier this year and the huge wave of ad campaigns, open letters, and debates that followed, it seems that everyone has an opinion on the merits (or lack thereof) of Flash on the modern web. Today, YouTube software engineer John Harding took to the site’s official blog to weigh on the current status of HTML5 video support. The gist of it: while HTML5 is great, it can’t do everything YouTube (or most mainstream video sites) need.
Harding explains his thesis point by point, beginning with the need for a standard video format for HTML5. Politics, codec quality, and patent disputes have kept HTML5 from adopting a single standard for video content (H.264, the industry standard, has licensing issues).