Buzz Out Loud 779: Ok A moo
Listen now: Download today's podcast
| EPISODE 779 |
Judge rules Sprint’s early-termination fees illegal
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-10004049-94.html
Travelers’ laptops may be detained at border
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/content/article/2008/08/01/laptops.html
In-flight cell ban advances in congress
http://mobile.slashdot.org/mobile/08/08/01/0124258.shtml
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10004170-1.html
Apple quickly kills popular iPhone-‘tethering’ app
http://blogs.pcworld.com/staffblog/archives/007376.html
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13515_3-10004278-26.html
http://www.macrumors.com/2008/07/31/nullriver-introduces-3g-edge-tethering-app-for-iphone/
College funding bill passed with anti-P2P provisions intact
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080801-college-funding-bill-passed-with-anti-p2p-provisions-intact.html
Hands on: Delicious 2 cleans up social bookmarking
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080801-hands-on-delicious-2-cleans-up-social-bookmarking.html
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10003874-2.html
China eases Internet restrictions for journalists
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/02/sports/olympics/02beijing.html
Online fantasy game's absurd cancellation policy leads to new law
http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/7/final-fantasy-online-s-arcane-cancellation-policy-baffles-lawmakers-leads-to-new-law
iPhone + Twitter + sedatives = not a great idea, really
http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/7/iphone-twitter-sedatives-not-a-great-idea-really
NASA: “We have water” on Mars
http://www.boingboing.net/2008/07/31/nasa-we-have-water-o.html
VOICEMAIL
Grahame, New York
Gift card horror story.
BlackBerry Guy
A little hands-free headset stuff.
Hey Buzz crew!
A word in defense of providing lunch for employees. I recently joined a start-up here in Boston which does this. We just reviewed the policy and concluded that it’s a great investment. My personal top three arguments in favor:
1. Builds camaraderie and fosters healthy mixing of individuals from different departments.
2. Keeps an otherwise, uh… “distractible” team in the office, rather than wandering around Chinatown looking for Boston’s best dumplings. More importantly, it keeps lunch hour contained within a fixed window of time--1:00 p.m. is actually a usable meeting time in our company.
3. In a competitive recruiting market, free lunch is an attractive perk. We get far more bang from our lunch dollars than if we allocated them toward standard comp.
Waldron, in Boston
**********
Drunk Dialers in Norway get heard through fjords!…fjords..fjords…fjords…
http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/public_megaphone_for_drunk_dialers_in_norway_10660.asp
http://www.unsworn.org/telemegaphone/
excerpt:
By dialing the Telemegaphone’s phone number, your voice will ring out across the fjord, the valley, and the village of Dale. A bright light at the top of the pole will be lit as your call goes through, projecting your voice across the valley.
Wanna try? On Aug 2, go here for the phone number. (This’ll work day & night until September 6, 2008).
Best,
Shalin
**********
Tom, to help you out on the iPhone end, go into settings. Under
Safari
there’s an option to switch the search from Google to Yahoo.
Steve from Buffalo, New York
**********
Hey BoL,
The caller in episode 778 who clarified some info on China’s Great
Firewall is right - VPNs are one path around China’s Net censors. A
friend of mine attended the Beijing University of Post &
Telecommunications, where she was taught how to use VPNs and other
proxy server techniques to evade the Great Firewall entirely. I
visited her dorm room when she was still in grad school there, and all
of her roommates (computer science students) were browsing and
downloading content quite freely. Apparently, they’re still huge fans
of ‘Friends.’
The real impact of the Great Firewall is psychological --China’s
government knows they can’t block everything, but if they make certain
information inconvenient enough to access for most of the population,
almost all users just get frustrated and give up. I’m constantly
surprised by how disinterested and oblivious my friend is about world
events, although I can’t speak for the other 1.32 billion. She’s
coming to the States for the second time in August and I’ll be very
curious to see how she reacts to western media’s perceptions of the
Olympics coverage.
<< “L O V E T H E S H O W”;
-Andrew
Portland, Oregan
**********
Dear Tom, Molly, and Jason,
While the new FireWire standard may be
faster then the current USB standard, the soon-to-be-released USB 3.0
spec has a max throughput of about 4.8 Gbit/s.
As host of the Buzz Report video series, Molly provides a fresh and funny perspective on the latest consumer electronic products to hit the market, as well as commentary on the stories and development that she thinks are truly buzz-worthy. She is also co-host of Buzz Out Loud, CNET's "podcast of indeterminate length," which entertains listeners with a funny and skeptical take on the day's technology news. Her other podcast, Gadgettes, is proof that girls can be geeks too.

Tom Merritt appears on
CNET TV, specializing in help and how-to and the ever popular Top 5
lists. He also co-hosts CNET's The Real Deal podcast.
Jason Howell can
often be found producing Buzz Out Loud from the audio studios at CNET,
updating XML feeds from the comfort of his cubicle, and saying "uh-oh"
from time to time. 

Molly @ around 3:25 into the podcast.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/detritus
What possible terroristic threat could a laptop contain? That is the point. There is nothing a laptop could have on it that needs to be seized to prevent terrorism. If someone wanted to get secret info (whatever that might be, I can't imagine) over the border wouldn't an encrypted file over the interweb via SSL be better than hand carrying it in a laptop?
This is the government looking for pirated movies, music and kiddie porn.
-
by rdiggle
August 4, 2008 11:17 PM PDT
- Just listened to this episode... my favourite is around the last minute, "The English language which is a language that has been embraced and created by hundreds of years of our ancestry in America".
-
Like this
Reply to this comment
-
(6 Comments)I had to rewind several times to listen to that again, "created by hundreds of years of our ancestry in America". No it wasn't!? Last time I checked, English was created hundreds of years before that in England!!?? Funny :)
Love the show!