Posts Tagged ‘order’

Yahoo fought back against ‘unconstitutional’ government order before joining PRISM: NYT

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Yahoo failed to overturn a government order in a court dispute that ultimately led the company to join PRISM, the NSA and FBI’s controversial surveillance program, the New York Times reported. A heavily redacted document from 2008 shows a company — identified by the Times as Yahoo — petitioning the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) to review an order from the government based on a belief that it violated the Fourth Amendment.

The FISC called Yahoo’s concerns “overblown” in its decision, saying it is “settled beyond peradventure that incidental collections occurring as a result of constitutionally permissible acquisitions do not render those acquisitions unlawful.”

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President Obama issues executive order to make government data open and machine readable

Remember Data.gov? The President does, and he has issued an executive order that should give the information portal a shot in the arm. Starting this week, new and modernized Government information systems should use open and machine readable formats by default, adhering to the guidelines of a new Open Data Policy. The policy requires agencies to use open, machine readable formats that are non-proprietary, publicly available and unrestricted, and aims to put useful data in the hands of US companies while increasing privacy and security.

According to the White House blog, this means new data will be served in CSV, XML, JSON and other machine readable formats, and will even be accessible via API in some situations. The White House hopes the new policy will help foster innovation. “There are private companies using open data to fight credit card fraud; consumers using open data to save on their energy bills; families leveraging open data to compare health care options; and a host of new apps and tools in areas ranging from public safety, to financial planning, to education, and more,” the blog explains. “We are very excited about the path ahead and can’t wait to see what new ideas and yet to be imagined innovations can be unlocked by increased access to open data.” Head past the break to read the executive order for yourself, and check out the source PDF for a peek at the new Open Data Policy.

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Source: White House (1), (2), PDF (3)

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President Obama signs executive order requiring agencies to publish ‘open data’

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President Obama came into office 2009 with a promise to make his administration the most “open” in history in terms of revealing information to the public about the inner-workings of government, a claim that has been challenged vociferously. But to further advance his open government ambitions, the President today issued an executive order requiring all major federal agencies under the executive branch to make their data “easy to find, accessible, and usable,” with an important caveat: ” wherever possible and legally permissible.” The White House also released a new set of open source software tools on Github that federal agencies can use to get more of their data out onto the web in software developer and user-friendly formats,…

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HSN’s order page for T-Mobile’s Lumia 521 goes live early

HSN's order page for T-Mobile's Lumia 521 goes live early

It feels like only yesterday we told you HSN would be the first retailer offering T-Mobile’s Nokia Lumia 521, and although the place hasn’t changed, the date has. The Lumia 520 variant wasn’t expected to be available through HSN’s online store until tomorrow, but in a bit of good news to kick off your Friday, the order page is now live. An off-contract handset will set you back $ 149.95, or four payments of $ 37.49. The next confirmed date we have for availability is May 11th at Microsoft and Walmart stores, so if you’re looking to bag one of the budget Windows Phone 8 handsets before then, head to the source link and hit the virtual checkout — not only may stock run dry, but HSN could’ve accidentally pulled the trigger early and hide the page when orders start rolling in.

[Thanks, Tim]

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Source: HSN

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Internet Borked? The Amazing Jellybean Resets It All In The Right Order With One Button Press (Or Over Bluetooth)

amazing jelly bean

A few years ago, I received a panicked phone call from a friend I hadn’t heard from in months. His Internet connection was on the fritz, and he had a huge project due the next morning. He’d called his ISP, and they were no help. As his only friend that, as he said, “knew computers and stuff”*, I was bound by International Homie Law to fix his crap.

“You’ve reset your modem, right?”

“Yeah, man — Comcast had me do that.”

“You reset your router, too, right?”

“Yeah. It’s still broken!”

“I’ll be over in a while.”

I arrive at his house a bit later, and have him point me toward his networking gear. It’s stuffed behind the TV in his living room, as it’s the only place in his apartment with a functioning coax cable coming out of the wall.

I ask him to reset his modem again. He reaches over and unplugs his modem. So far, so good.

I ask him to reset his router again. He reaches over and unplugs his roommate’s AppleTV.

Whoops.


Every geek has a story (or 10) like this one. The Amazing Jellybean, an ongoing Kickstarter project, wants to make them a little less common.

The Amazing Jellybean is, at its core, a power switch. But it’s a power switch with smarts.

You see, the modem/router reset dance is a bit more complicated than it probably should be. Unplug both. Wait 60 seconds. Plug in modem. Wait 60 seconds. Plug in router. Wait 60 seconds. That’s 180+ seconds! Nicholas Cage could have stolen your car like three times by then.

The Amazing Jellybean (a name which I am starting to feel ridiculous typing) handles all that with a single button push. Push the button, walk away. It’ll kill both the modem and the router, then bring them back online in the right order and with enough time in between for a proper boot sequence.

That alone makes it a pretty killer product to get for, say, your mom. Or your uncle. Or that one friend who has no idea how he keeps getting spyware from all of the totally legit sites he browses on his curiously sticky Dell. Cough.

But you, you don’t need this, right? You’re a titan of technology! You don’t nee no stinkin’ box rebooting your modem for you! Oh, did I mention it has Bluetooth connectivity so you can reset your broken connection without getting out of your chair to battle dust bunnies? Yeah, that’s what sold me on it, too.

Is it a more of a band-aid than a permanent solution to a bigger problem? Sure — but it’s a problem that has been lurkin’ around consumer grade networking gear for decades now. It’s probably not gonna disappear anytime soon.

As for why it’s shaped like a Jellybean? I have absolutely no idea.

Find the Kickstarter page here.

[* Pro tip: When a conversation starts with "Hey, you know computers and stuff, right?", the only correct answer is a straight-faced "What's a computer?"]



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With Q4 Revenues Two Weeks Out And Stock Dipping, BlackBerry Unexpectedly Announces Mystery Order Of 1M BB10 Handsets

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BlackBerry issued a news release today that totals up to bit more than “ Look! We ’ re selling mobiles! ” The 4 paragraph release hit the wire at 3:17 ET, and shares (which had been down on the day on the NASDAQ) soared immediately afterwards. BlackBerry provides no details about who put the order or why, keeping in mind only that it ’ s the solitary largest order for the devices “ in history. ” They ended the release with a suggestion that BlackBerry ’ s financial 2013 fourth quarter incomes results will be stated in two weeks time.

From the release:

BlackBerry ® (NASDAQ: BBRY)(TSX: BB) announced today that one of its established partners has placed an order for one million BlackBerry 10 smartphones, with shipments starting immediately. This order marks the largest ever before single investment order in BlackBerry ’ s history. ” An order for one million devices is a remarkable ballot of self-confidence in BlackBerry 10, ” stated Rick Costanzo, EVP Global Sales, BlackBerry. “ Customers are ready for a brand-new user experience, and BlackBerry 10 delivers. With sturdy partner support, coupled with this genuinely re-invented new platform, we have an effective dish for success. ”

So, to recap: BlackBerry states ‘ Right here ’ s a wildly sizable order we got, without real information offered (and no timeline for the shipment of the order, either), at an essential time for our company when stock was slumping based upon a dip after an earlier rise about acquisition rumors, ahead of quarterly results which will almost definitely be unsatisfactory due to the fact that they put on ’ t yet represent and include the launch of our brand-new platform. ”

BlackBerry informed us via an emailed statement that they can ’ t disclose the identification of the purchaser due to privacy contracts with the partner.

The release itself was very humorous, however the chart of exactly what happened to equip rate right away following the information is even better:

The jury is still out whether Blackberry is just whistling past the graveyard below or if the nascent trend of major purchasers upgrading their BB fleets (and reinforcing the stock) will hold.

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What are the best sites people order robot damshii type of robots?

Question by Forgotten Star: What are the best sites people order robot damshii type of robots?
Robot spirits in other words. I tried amazon. Is there a way better site than this with a huge wide selection of robots?

Best answer:

Answer by Kolped™
http://www.gundamplanet.com/s-f-models/robot-spirits.html

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Obama Signs Executive Order To Protect Against Cyber Threats

After hackers attack major U.S. media companies, the administration gets tough.

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration announced steps taken Tuesday to step up the nation’s response to emerging cyber-threats.

President Barack Obama signed an executive order hours before delivering his fourth State of the Union to Congress to strengthen cooperation between government agencies and the private sector to identify and respond to threats — including hacking — by sharing classified and unclassified information.

The order also calls for the National Institute of Standards and Technology to develop a “technology neutral” framework for protecting critical infrastructure.

The administration also issued a Presidential Policy Directive to streamline government efforts to protect physical and cyber infrastructure, including updating the National Infrastructure Protection Plan and completing a “national critical infrastructure security and resilience research and development plan within 2 years.”

“Critical infrastructure must be secure and able to withstand and rapidly recover from all hazards. Achieving this will require integration with the national preparedness system across prevention, protection, mitigation, response, and recovery,” the directive says.

The measures come weeks after revelations that major media companies and government agencies have come under hacking attacks. Neither the executive order nor the directive mentions any alleged perpetrators of large-scale cybercrimes— most often linked to China, and sometimes traced to elements of its government or military.

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Obama will reportedly introduce cybersecurity executive order in wake of recent attacks

President Obama

Bloomberg is reporting that the White House plans to introduce an executive order on cybersecurity sometime after next week’s State of the Union address. The order, which has been in the works for months at this point, would arrive after several high-profile attacks have highlighted the threat posed by online attacks. Just last week, the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times revealed they’d been the victims of attacks — thought to have originated in China — while Twitter announced it could have had as many as 250,000 user accounts compromised.

According to the report, the order will set up a set of voluntary cybersecurity standards that companies operating important US infrastructure will be able to participate in. Federal…

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Apple’s Tim Cook Says iPhone And iPad Supply Component Order Cut Rumors Don’t Tell The Whole Story

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Apple CEO Tim Cook took some time on the company ’ s earnings phone today to discuss a specific rumor, which is an extreme strangeness for Apple ’ s top-tier executives. He prefaced it by saying he doesn ’ t wish to make a practice of dealing with reports, however went on to comment on current reports that iPad and iPhone part order volumes have been cut owing to weak demand. “ I understand there ’ s been great deals of reports about order cuts and so forth, ” he said. “ I would suggest it ’ s great to question the precision of any kind of rumor about develop strategies, as well as if

a particular information point were precise, it would be impossible to interpret that records point for what it implies for our total business. ” Cook ended his discussion of the problem by outlining that a “ solitary data point is not a great proxy for exactly what ’ s going on. ” The intent was clearly to defuse the capability of supply chain reports to affect expert outlooks on the company and consequently stock price, because the recent episode of these kinds of stories originating from providers are most likely a key part of recent stock rate volatility.

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