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1165 - Kindles for all? The future is cloudy.
Aired
Friday, February 12, 2010
Duration
36:41
Hosts
Producer
Guests
none


The rumor mill has it that Amazon wants to give its Prime subscribers a free Kindle. Like, all of them. We think that fails the sniff test, but we might be hypersensitive because of the ridiculous rumor mill that briefly killed off the Palm Pre and Palm Pixi this week. Oh, and Google's working on fixing Buzz. Thanks, Google. --Molly


Stories Covered[]

Top Stories[]

No Show Monday![]

Google to make Buzz changes based on userfeedback

http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/millions-of-buzz-users-and-improvements.html


Brief Macworld 2010 overview

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2010/02/11/urnidgns852573C400693880002576C800034E18.DTL

http://www.macworld.com/article/146297/2010/02/bos2010_winners.html


The iPad that launched a thousand apps

http://brainstormtech.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2010/02/12/ipad-buzz-launched-1600-new-apps/

Other Stories[]

TiVo to unveil new DVR on March 2?

http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10451817-1.html


Rumors of Palm Pre/Pixi deathgreatly exaggerated

http://www.cnet.com/8301-17918_1-10452140-85.html


Amazon Wants To Give A Free Kindle To All Amazon Prime Subscribers

http://techcrunch.com/2010/02/12/amazon-wants-to-give-a-free-kindle-to-all-amazon-prime-subscribers/


Slight dip in Google’s January searchmarketshare

http://news.cnet.com/8301-30684_3-10452235-265.html


Video Game sales still struggling – Mass Effect 2 takes silver as Jan. sales slip 13% -NPD

http://www.gamespot.com/news/6250305.html?tag=latestheadlines;title;2


Kickers and Science[]

FAA Data Shows Exploding Batteries Are Rare, SmallRisk

http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/02/11/2252214/FAA-Data-Shows-Exploding-Batteries-Are-Rare-Small-Risk

Voicemail[]

Andrew on what it takes for him to buy an iPad


Michael aka MC Fisticuffs on Tom’s prediction


Emails[]

Tom,


Heard you guys ask about a template for a DMCA counter template. With my recent dealings with OnLive I found just that:


http://www.chillingeffects.org/dmca/counter512.pdf

Ryan Shrout

PC Perspective




Hey Tomolito(?):


Regarding episode 1163 and Read Write Web thing, just thought we’d mention something we’ve been talking about for about two years.


Facebook = AOL circa 1997. Think about it…


1) It has its own mail/messaging system? Check.

2) It has chat? Check.

3) It’s feared as a place for online predation? Check.

4) It’s valued well beyond reason? Check.

5) Most importantly: Companies advertise their page on AOL/Facebook instead of their website? (“Visit us at AOL keyword ‘Chevy’.” or “Visit us at Facebook.com/Chevy”) Check.


Who knows, maybe Facebook will try to buy a studio. :)


Thanks, guys, and keeping on buzzing!


Mo & Vij

The Boys From Boston


PS – Welcome back, Molly! Your rants are like manna to our ears.




Dear Buzz Crew,


I love the show. But lately my favorite new gadget (Droid Eris) has been getting dissed on your show. First you talked about multi-touch on the Nexus ONe and how none of the other Android phones have multi-touch. Well actually, my Droid Eris has always had multi-touch in the browser and the photo album. Then Tom suggested Molly get her mom a Droid Eris because it is not as advanced as the Motorola Droid That made it sound like a glorified texting phone! It is true that the Motorola has 2.0 and the Eris only has 1.5. It “DOES” pretty much everything that the Motorola Droid can do and it is rumored to be getting 2.1 by the end of March. Thanks for listening to my “Tina Rant”!


Tina in Omaha




Jamoto,

I need to rant about this. I am a developer of a free iphone XMPP client called Monal. I was really excited to hear that Facebook finally opened up their network to XMPP clients after promising it for years. I raced home to try it out and discovered that they had done probably one of the worst implementations ever. The chat does not use SSL encryption unlike almost every other server. Better yet, they decided to use an authentication scheme called Digest-MD5, which aside from having varying implementations and compatibility problems was DEPRECATED by the IETF in January 2009 ( https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-sasl-digest-to-historic ) because it can be cracked. Facebook has just opened up a gaping hole in their security. Someone at facebook needs to be fired.


The link above explains many of the problems with Digest-MD5 but this is the best one. 8. The cryptographic primitives in DIGEST-MD5 are not up to today’s standards, in particular:


A. The MD5 hash is sufficiently weak to make a brute force attack on DIGEST-MD5 easy with common hardware.


B. Using the RC4 algorithm for the security layer without discarding the initial key stream output is prone to attack.


-Anu

the programmer in Boston


After The Credits[]

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