Love the Mac > Which one do you recommend?
[Mac Informant] In a disturbingly true representation of reality, Nitrozac and Snaggy from Joy of Tech give us a hilarious comic:
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Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[Fergdawg.blogspot.com] Fergie's Tech Blog: 2006/02/19 - 2006/02/25: A new report by CDT details a widening gap between the technology that collects sensitive personal data and the laws designed to protect that data against government misuse. The National Security Agency's domestic spying program, the Justice Department's efforts to obtain millions of Internet search records, the government's use of cell phones to track suspects, and other developments highlight the law's failure to keep pace with technological advances, according to "
[Crunchnotes.com] CrunchNotes » The Microsoft “Scandal”: Speaking of sites with a philosophy that’s helped by a human hand, Digg gets another cash infusion - This is mostly an inside baseball story, but it’s worth noting that most folks take it to mean Digg won’t be bought out. I was interested to read the line in the last update about Digg being “more likely to focus on partnering with other sites that have expressed integrating Diggs format into their own sites.” It’s probably safe to predict that we’ll see site specific Digg pages in the new year.
[Geekswithblogs.net] urig: But then I needed to find an old blog entry from Oren Eini's blog (a book recommendation for a fantasy trilogy of all things) and I've discovered that Google Reader is missing something very important. Something that Google is almost synonymous with - a search box.
[Money.cnn.com] The Browser: Truth and rumors from the tech world: The RIAA would have a tough time making its charges stick in a court of law, says attorney Ray Beckerman on his blog, because of the process by which it identifies so-called downloaders. "No investigation is made to ascertain that the defendant is actually someone who engaged in peer to peer file sharing of copyrighted music without authorization," notes Beckerman, and "defendants have included people who have never even used a computer." That may sound kind of wild, but it's true: The record labels get traffic records from Internet service providers and attempt to match up people with Internet addresses, in a notoriously unreliable process.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, OSx, Love The Mac