Natali has some tips for secure password hints that involve her armpits. You'll just have to listen. We also give our thoughts on Office 2010 and what kids these days are doing on the Internet. That includes Brian Tong.
Stories Covered[]
First Take: Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview
http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-10284013-12.html
Monday’s Office 2010 preview leaks to BitTorrent
Ericsson to run Sprint’s wireless network, but how?
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/07/ericssons-rx-for-us-broadband.ars
Collapse in illegal sharing and boom in streaming brings music to executives’ ears
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2009/jul/12/music-industry-illegal-downloading-streaming
Note by ‘teenage scribbler’ causes sensation
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/035e83fe-6f18-11de-9109-00144feabdc0.html
Six in 10 companies plan to skip Windows 7: survey
http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSTRE56C0NC20090713
Re-Rumor: Apple Tablet Coming in October, Priced at $800
http://gizmodo.com/5313266/re+rumor-apple-tablet-coming-in-october-priced-at-800
http://www.engadget.com/2009/07/13/apples-9-7-inch-netbook-to-debut-in-october-for-800/
How to use electrical outlets and cheap lasers to steal data
http://www.networkworld.com/news/2009/070909-electrical-data-theft.html
Strong Passwords Not as Good as You Think
http://it.slashdot.org/story/09/07/13/1336235/Strong-Passwords-Not-as-Good-as-You-Think
iPhone in China w/o Wi-Fi
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10285137-37.html
Apollo 11 moon mission to be recreated on the web
http://www.engadget.com/2009/07/13/apollo-11-moon-mission-to-be-recreated-on-the-web/
Mario Marathon
Voicemail[]
Crowdsourcing player movements is a bad idea
Tech support call
Emails[]
I was shopping at a local Wal Mart this weekend when I came across $98.00 Blu Ray players. Alot of them, shelves FULL! Everyone was just walking by I didn’t see anyone buying them or even giving them a second look.
Seems to me the interest is fading. Sony may have really screwed up on this format, just like every other format they’ve come up with.
Regards
Robert King
Eau Claire WI
Dear Buzz Crew,
I have to comment on the gaze-tracking privacy software discussed in
Wednesday’s episode 1014. Tom was absolutely correct that it shows
normal text to the authorized user and gibberish to everyone else.
(At least for the high-end product Chameleon; the consumer product
PrivateEye just obscures the whole screen.) I guess not everyone has
taken a visual perception class, so I’ll try to explain.
We have the intuitive impression that our eyes behave like cameras –
constantly reading in all the pixels, and smoothly panning around from
object to object. Not so at all! Half of your visual cortex is
devoted to the central two degrees of your visual field. That works
out to half an inch of good focus area at a standard reading distance
of 14 inches. Moreover, your eyes constantly jump around in
incredibly fast, involuntary movements called saccades, only pausing
for about 200 milliseconds at a time. During the saccades, visual
input is suppressed. With decent gaze-tracking equipment (such as
from you local college’s cognitive psychology department), you can
flash up pictures of penguins during saccades, and the user won’t
notice anything odd.
Here’s a video showing someone’s eye movements while reading Google
search results:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w29DrEEsqT4
And yes, your eyes still jump around even when you’re reading a structured text document. Chameleon just fills everything except the tiny, fluctuating area you’re looking at with random text.
Thanks for this and all the other cool stories!
–Amy in Pennsylvania
http://oculislabs.com/Products/ChameleonP.htm (mouse over “oculis in action”)
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