iThings

Apple has been ordered to pay damages to rival Samsung Electronics by a court in the Netherlands.

The court said that Apple had infringed a patent held by Samsung relating to the way phones and tablet PCs connect to the internet.

Apple, which recently became the world’s most valuable firm, has been facing various legal issues.

In a separate case, it was fined $2.3m (£1.5m) in Australia for its claims on 4G capabilities of the iPad.

And it is still not clear how much it may have to pay to Samsung in damages.

The Dutch court did not specify any amount, but the damages will be calculated based on sales of Apple’s iPhone and iPad in the Netherlands.

“Samsung welcomes the court’s ruling, which reaffirmed Apple’s free-riding of our technological innovation,” the South Korean manufacturer said in an emailed statement to the BBC.

“In accordance with the ruling, we will seek adequate compensation for the damages Apple and its products have caused.”

Samsung had claimed that Apple had infringed four of its patents. However, the Dutch court said that only one of those had been breached.

Artificial blood vessels made on a 3D printer

Artificial blood vessels made on a 3D printer may soon be used for transplants of lab-created organs.
Until now, the stumbling block in tissue engineering has been supplying artificial tissue with nutrients that have to arrive via capillary vessels.
A team at the Fraunhofer Institute in Germany has solved that problem using 3D printing and a technique called multiphoton polymerisation.
The findings will be shown at the Biotechnica Fair in Germany in October.
Out of thousands of patients in desperate need of an organ transplant there are inevitably some who do not get it in time.
In Germany, for instance, more than 11,000 people have been put on an organ transplant waiting list in 2011 alone.
To make sure more patients receive these life-saving surgeries, researchers in tissue engineering all over the globe have been working on creating artificial tissue and even entire organs in the lab.
But for a lab-made organ to function, it needs to be equipped with artificial blood vessels – tiny and extremely complex tubes that our organs naturally possess, used to carry nutrients.
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The individual techniques are already functioning and they are presently working in the test phase”

Dr Gunter TovarFraunhofer Institute, Germany

Numerous attempts have been made to create synthetic capillaries, and the latest one by the German team seems to be especially promising.
“The individual techniques are already functioning and they are presently working in the test phase; the prototype for the combined system is being built,” said Dr Gunter Tovar, who heads the BioRap project at Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB in Stuttgart.

Elastic biomaterials

3D printing technology has been increasingly used in numerous industries, ranging from creating clothes, architectural models and even chocolate treats.
But this time, Dr Tovar’s team had a much more challenging printing mission.
To print something as small and complex as a blood vessel, the scientists combined the 3D printing technology with two-photon polymerisation – shining intense laser beams onto the material to stimulate the molecules in a very small focus point.
The material then becomes an elastic solid, allowing the researchers to create highly precise and elastic structures that would be able to interact with a human body’s natural tissue.
So that the synthetic tubes do not get rejected by the living organism, their walls are coated with modified biomoelcules.
Such biomolecules are also present in the composition of the “inks” used for the blood vessel printer, combined with synthetic polymers.
“We are establishing a basis for applying rapid prototyping to elastic and organic biomaterials,” said Dr Tovar.
“The vascular systems illustrate very dramatically what opportunities this technology has to offer, but that’s definitely not the only thing possible.”

Windows 8

Seattle.- A medida que Microsoft Corp se prepara para demostrar al mundo lo que su nuevo Windows 8 puede hacer para la próxima generación de tabletas de alta potencia, las revisiones iniciales del nuevo sistema operativo en el hardware existente resa…

Seattle.- A medida que Microsoft Corp se prepara para demostrar al mundo lo que su nuevo Windows 8 puede hacer para la próxima generación de tabletas de alta potencia, las revisiones iniciales del nuevo sistema operativo en el hardware existente resaltan los desafíos que enfrenta la compañía con el nuevo diseño radical de su producto insignia.

La mayor compañía de software del mundo dice que

LiquiGlide Bottle

MIT PhD candidate Dave Smith and his team of mechanical engineers and nano-technologists from the Varanasi Research Group, have finally solved our ages-old debate on how to best get condiments out of the bottle.

Previous to this invention, the extraction of ketchup from the bottle has been a point of pride for some. Everyone’s method is different. Some advocate jamming a butter knife into the neck of the bottle to dislodge the contents. According to its website, Heinz 57 recommends applying “a firm tap to the sweet spot on the neck of the bottle — the “57.” Our children may never have to know this trick, thanks to LiquiGlide. The super slippery, non-toxic coating keeps condiments like ketchup, mayo and mustard from sticking to the sides of glass and plastic bottles, and allows them to slip right down to the most important place: your food.

Smith told Austin Carr at Fast Company that they were originally interested in applying the LiquiGlide coating to car windshields and the insides of gas or oil lines that frequently clog. We are so thankful they decided to apply this amazing technology to food. We’ll never have to squeeze ketchup juice all over our backyard BBQ attire again!

Privly

A new tool under development by Oregon State computer scientists could radically alter the way that communications work on the web. Privly is a sort of manifesto-in-code, a working argument for a more private, less permanent Internet.

The system we have now gives all the power to the service providers. That seemed to be necessary, but Privly shows that it is not: Users could have a lot more power without giving up social networking. Just pointing that out is a valuable contribution to the ongoing struggle to understand and come up with better ways of sharing and protecting ourselves online.

“Companies like Twitter, Google, and Facebook make you choose between modern technology and privacy. But the Privly developers know this to be false choice,” lead dev Sean McGregor says in the video below. “You can communicate through the site of your choosing without giving the host access to your content.”

Through browser extensions, Privly allows you to post to social networks and send email without letting those services see “into” your text. Instead, your actual words get encrypted and then routed to Privlys servers (or an eventual peer-to-peer network). What the social media site “sees” is merely a link that Privly expands in your browser into the full content. Of course, this requires that people who want to see your content also need Privly installed on their machines.

limited unlimited

AT&T Inc. is effectively ending unlimited data plans, saying that it will no longer let customers use more than a set amount of data per month without penalty.
Under a new policy, AT&T will slow download speeds for unlimited 3G and 4G smartphone customers who exceed three gigabytes and 4G LTE users who exceed five gigabytes of data in a given month. AT&T had previously been slowing speeds, or throttling, customers who were in the top 5% of data users in their respective market.

AT&T has been trying to manage capacity on its network in the face of heavy data consumption by Apple Inc. iPhone users and a limited supply of wireless airwaves, or spectrum. The carrier is spending billions to build out a new fourth-generation mobile-broadband network that can handle more data traffic.
A spokesman, Mark Siegel, said the new guidelines were necessary because of confusion among unlimited customers over when their download speeds would be slowed. He declined to say by how much the speeds would be decreased.
Now, AT&T says customers will get a text message when their usage approaches 3GB in one billing cycle. AT&T will slow customers’ data speeds for the rest of that billing cycle.
After that, speeds go back to normal if customers stay under the limit. But if they exceed the limit again, customers’ speeds get slowed without receiving another text-message reminder.
In 2010, AT&T was the first carrier to introduce so-called tiered pricing plans which capped customers’ data use. It allowed existing customers to keep their unlimited data plans indefinitely. About 56% of AT&T’s smartphone customers are on the tiered plans, the carrier said Wednesday.
The Dallas-based carrier in January boosted the prices of the tiered plans by as much as 33% while increasing the amount of data allowed per month.
AT&T and other carriers have been pushing Congress and the Federal Communications Commission to release more licenses for wireless airwaves to help stave off a capacity crunch as more customers download video, music and photos to their smartphones.
The data caps aren’t the only moves the Dallas-based telecommunications giant is taking to manage its network. In recent weeks, the carrier has begun sending out notices to some customers still using cellphones on its older 2G cellular network to swap out their devices for newer ones that can run on 3G networks.
“Your current, older-model 2G phone might not be able to make or receive calls and you may experience degradation of your wireless service in certain areas,” AT&T cautioned in the letter. Mr. Siegel said the carrier hoped to use some of the 2G spectrum for new technologies, though it would still offer 2G services to those who want them.
“We’re simply urging them to upgrade to a new device if they want to,” Mr. Siegel said.
Mr. Siegel said the carrier sent the notices to customers in the New York metropolitan area and may send them to other customers. He noted the program was voluntary and affected a small number of subscribers and most 2G phones would continue to work.
AT&T is offering the users one of four free phones, such as the Samsung Electronics Co. Evergreen or the LG Electronics Inc. GU295.


Jane Foody’s iPhone is practically her personal assistant. 
The 27-year-old physical therapist and yoga instructor from Yonkers, NY, uses her iPhone for everything, from scheduling appointments, to streaming music during lessons, to showing her clients how to properly strike a downward dog pose.
But last month, AT&T threatened to shut down Jane’s personal assistant. AT&T sent Jane a text message saying that she was using too much data on her unlimited data plan, and that they could block her access to high-speed data. Jane says her iPhone would be useless for anything but making phone calls and sending text messages, and she’s not happy about it.
Jane started a petition on Change.org calling on AT&T to stop slowing down data and respect the unlimited data plans paid for by customers. AT&T is digging in its heels after 10,000 people already signed Jane’s petition. The company responded to the campaign by saying customers with unlimited plans can only access three gigabytes of data per month — meaning unlimited plans no longer exist!
Jane isn’t the only AT&T customer being accused of using “too much” data on unlimited plans. A huge article from the Associated Press revealed just weeks ago that AT&T is similarly targeting the top 5% of its “unlimited” data customers, or nearly 850,000 people. 
Jane says she tried to file a complaint with AT&T about being unable to use her unlimited data, but the only responses she says she got were from sales representatives pushing her to pay more money to be able to use as much data as she wants. “I told them, ‘I shouldn’t need to do that since I have unlimited data,'” Jane said.
Cell phone companies have listened to customer outrage before: in December, more than 166,000 Change.org members successfully pushed Verizon to cancel a new fee to pay bills online. Jane hopes that if enough people speak out to AT&T, the cell phone company will also buckle and listen to their customers.
Thanks for being a change-maker,
– Jon, William, Jess, Tim, Michael, and the Change.org team

.NET Compact Framework 2.0

OpenNETCF.org es un repositorio de información y código fuente sobre Microsoft .NET Compact Framework. OpenNETCF.org empezó como un proyecto de código abierto para extender la funcionalidad de .Net 1.x. A partir del Smart Device Framework 2.0 el c

OpenNETCF.org es un repositorio de información y código fuente sobre Microsoft .NET Compact Framework. OpenNETCF.org empezó como un proyecto de código abierto para extender la funcionalidad de .Net 1.x. A partir del Smart Device Framework 2.0 el código fuente dejo de ser libre.

En el mismo sito de Microsoft hay referencias a ejemplos de aplicaciones móviles que usan las extensiones de OpenNETCF.

Google Privacy Policy

We’re getting rid of over 60 different privacy policies across Google and replacing them with one that’s a lot shorter and easier to read. Our new policy covers multiple products and features, reflecting our desire to create one beautifully simple and intuitive experience across Google.
We believe this stuff matters, so please take a few minutes to read our updated Privacy Policy and Terms of Service at http://www.google.com/policies. These changes will take effect on March 1, 2012. 

Got questions?
We’ve got answers.
Visit our FAQ at http://www.google.com/policies/faq to read more about the changes. (We figured our users might have a question or twenty-two.)

employers asking for Facebook passwords

SEATTLE (AP) — Two U.S. senators are asking Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate whether employers asking for Facebook passwords during job interviews are violating federal law, their offices announced Sunday.

Troubled by reports of the practice, Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer of New York and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut said they are calling on the Department of Justice and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to launch investigations. The senators are sending letters to the heads of the agencies.

The Associated Press reported last week that some private and public agencies around the country are asking job seekers for their social media credentials. The practice has alarmed privacy advocates, but the legality of it remains murky.

On Friday, Facebook warned employers not to ask job applicants for their passwords to the site so they can poke around on their profiles. The company threatened legal action against applications that violate its long-standing policy against sharing passwords.

A Facebook executive cautioned that if an employer discovers that a job applicant is a member of a protected group, the employer may be vulnerable to claims of discrimination if it doesn’t hire that person.

Personal information such as gender, race, religion and age are often displayed on a Facebook profile — all details that are protected by federal employment law.

“We don’t think employers should be asking prospective employees to provide their passwords because we don’t think it’s the right thing to do. While we do not have any immediate plans to take legal action against any specific employers, we look forward to engaging with policy makers and other stakeholders, to help better safeguard the privacy of our users,” Facebook said in a statement.

Not sharing passwords is a basic tenet of online conduct. Aside from the privacy concerns, Facebook considers the practice a security risk.

“In an age where more and more of our personal information — and our private social interactions — are online, it is vital that all individuals be allowed to determine for themselves what personal information they want to make public and protect personal information from their would-be employers. This is especially important during the job-seeking process, when all the power is on one side of the fence,” Schumer said in a statement.

Specifically, the senators want to know if this practice violates the Stored Communications Act or the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Those two acts, respectively, prohibit intentional access to electronic information without authorization and intentional access to a computer without authorization to obtain information.

The senators also want to know whether two court cases relating to supervisors asking current employees for social media credentials could be applied to job applicants.

“I think it’s going to take some years for courts to decide whether Americans in the digital age have the same privacy rights” as previous generations, American Civil Liberties Union attorney Catherine Crump said in a previous interview with the AP.

The senators also said they are drafting a bill to fill in any gaps that current laws don’t cover.

Maryland and Illinois are considering bills that would bar public agencies for asking for this information.

In California, Democratic Sen. Leland Yee introduced a bill that would prohibit employers from asking current employees or job applicants for their social media user names or passwords. That state measure also would bar employers from requiring access to employees’ and applicants’ social media content, to prevent employers from requiring logins or printouts of that content for their review.

In Massachusetts, state Democratic Rep. Cheryl Coakly-Rivera also filed a similar bill Friday that also expands to include personal email. Her measure also bars employers from “friending” a job applicant to view protected Facebook profiles or using similar methods for other protected social media websites.

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Manuel Valdes can be reached at https://twitter.com/ByManuelValdes.