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Compellent adopts solid state   more similar news »
Adds remote site replication and cut-over to roadmap

SNW At SNW in Dallas Compellent has become the first storage array vendor to follow EMC's lead and add solid state storage (SSD) to its product line. It has also added automatic cut-over to a remote site following server failover.…

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Ritz Camera: Canon EOS 50D 15MP Digital SLR Camera Kit with 28-135mm Lens $1600 shipped + $50 GC   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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6ave.com: Tomtom ONE 130 Portable Navigation System $134 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Staples: 29-Piece Tool Kit $8   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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CircuitCity: Sony TDM-NC1 Digital Media Port Wi-Fi Client $72 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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NewEgg: Intel Core 2 Duo E8500 Wolfdale 3.16GHz Dual-Core Processor $190 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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NewEgg: Seagate Barracuda ST3750640AS 750GB Hard Drive $95 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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6ave.com: Panasonic TH46PZ80U 46in 1080p Plasma HDTV $1175 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Dell Home: Canon FS11 Flash Card 37X Zoom Digital Camcorder $370 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Sierra Trading Post: Victorinox Travel Webseries Webdirector Wheeled Briefcase $115   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Dell Biz: Vostro 410 desktop Q6600 3GB 250GB DVD+-RW128MB video Vista Biz + 20in LCD $729 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Sports Authority: 15% off ends 4pm EST   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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JandR: Magellan Maestro 3100 GPS Portable Navigation System $97 shipped   more similar news »
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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For Greenspan’s Wife, Covering the Financial Crisis Is on a Case-by-Case Basis   more similar news »
Andrea Mitchell, NBC News correspondent and wife of the former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, has for years kept her potential conflict of interest in check.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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No New Economic Proposal Expected From McCain   more similar news »
Signs of internal confusion came as the campaign was under pressure from state party leaders to sharpen its economic message.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Reaching for a Higher Profile, Abu Dhabi Opens a Hub for Western Media   more similar news »
CNN, The Financial Times and other media companies are setting up shop in the island city that is the capital of the United Arab Emirates.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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‘Chihuahua’ Is Top Draw at Box Office   more similar news »
A picture about talking dogs, “Beverly Hills Chihuahua,” trampled Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe at the weekend box office.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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A Potential Merger Weighs on Detroit   more similar news »
Merger talks between General Motors and Chrysler are a gut-punch to a city reeling from scandal and a downturn.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Korean Star’s Suicide Reignites Debate on Web Regulation   more similar news »
When movie star Choi Jin-sil was found dead, South Korean police, the media and members of Parliament immediately pointed fingers at the Internet.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Korean Star’s Suicide Reignites Debate on Web Regulation   more similar news »
When movie star Choi Jin-sil was found dead, South Korean police, the media and members of Parliament immediately pointed fingers at the Internet.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Campaign Articles From Newsweek Become E-Books for Amazon Kindle   more similar news »
It would seem to be a magazine’s dream: Take something you have already published and sold, repackage it and distribute it without paper or ink expenses.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Campaign Articles From Newsweek Become E-Books for Amazon Kindle   more similar news »
It would seem to be a magazine’s dream: Take something you have already published and sold, repackage it and distribute it without paper or ink expenses.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Drilling Down: A Pop-Up Ad That’s Less Annoying   more similar news »
In a 2003 survey, nearly a third of respondents said that Internet pop-up advertisements were “never appropriate.”
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Drilling Down: A Pop-Up Ad That’s Less Annoying   more similar news »
In a 2003 survey, nearly a third of respondents said that Internet pop-up advertisements were “never appropriate.”
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Link By Link: Spinning a Web of Lies at Digital Speed   more similar news »
In recent days there has been a range of false Internet reports that managed to gain great purchase across the globe while the truth is still logging on.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Link By Link: Spinning a Web of Lies at Digital Speed   more similar news »
In recent days there has been a range of false Internet reports that managed to gain great purchase across the globe while the truth is still logging on.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Breakingviews.com: Crisis Is Milder Outside Finance   more similar news »
With everyone trying hard to keep a depression away, the authorities ought to be able to win the monetary battle in relatively short order.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Spanish Bank Said to Be Close to Buying Sovereign Bancorp   more similar news »
Banco Santander of Spain is in advanced talks to acquire Sovereign for about $2.5 billion, people briefed on the matter said.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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The Media Equation: L.A. Follows Its Own Script   more similar news »
People who finance Hollywood continue to make large bets that people will still go to the movies.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Q&A: John Hodgman on Perfecting the Illusion of Expertise   more similar news »
John Hodgman is an expert. At everything. (OK, maybe not sports.) But where he really excels is in creating the illusion of expertise — and not letting pesky facts intrude on that authority. From his first book, a compendium of faux trivia aptly titled The Areas of My Expertise, to his fiction-spewing shtick on The Daily Show to his role as the bloviating PC in those Mac ads, Hodgman handles the most obscure subjects with an aura of invincible confidence. The fact that it's fake? All the funnier. Hodgman talks to Wired about his latest book, More Information Than You Require (out in October), and his new area of bona fide expertise: being semi-famous. Wired: Is your character on The Daily Show the same person narrating your books? Or, for that matter, the PC in your Mac ads? Hodgman: I should clarify at this point: I'm not that John Hodgman. There's a guy who goes on The Daily Show claiming to be me. And there's a guy who goes on the Mac ads claiming to be me. Wired: You should sue! Hodgman: No, I would say that the Resident Expert on The Daily Show is all me, or at least a heightened aspect of myself. Aside from finding humor in the deadpan descriptions of things precisely as they are, I just veer off into the fantastic and the absurd. Wired: And that has made you slightly famous. Hodgman: Well, I always had this desire to celebrate and somehow be a part of things that I thought were really great. When I wrote about Battlestar Galactica for The New York... Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Oct. 13, 1884: Greenwich Resolves Subprime Longitude Crisis   more similar news »
1884: Geographers and astronomers adopt Greenwich as the Prime Meridian, the international standard for zero degrees longitude. The late 19th century was an era of standardization. With the Second Industrial Revolution stimulating world trade, the Treaty of the Meter established the International System of weights and measures in 1875. With railroads linking together entire continents, nations were replacing hundreds (or even thousands) of diverging local times with a system of hour-wide time zones. (The United States adopted its zones in 1883.) Amid all this, navigation at sea -- and the charting of stars in the heavens -- often remained a matter of local, national or even religious preference. Maps might be based on longitude east or west of Jerusalem, Saint Petersburg, Rome, Pisa, Copenhagen (think Tycho Brahe, Oslo, Paris, Greenwich (just east of central London), El Hierro (in the Canary Islands), Philadelphia (former U.S. capital) and Washington, D.C. These divergent reference meridians -- representing a mixture of astronomical, theological and maritime power -- ranged over 112 degrees of longitude. You could do the math, but that meant you did the math. These were the days before computers and even the bulkiest of mechanical calculators. Got abacus? Many state boundaries in the U.S. West were determined by the Washington Meridian, which then ran through the Old Naval Observatory in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood. But an 1850 law established its use "for... Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Obama v. McCain: The Wired Scorecard   more similar news »
What do Barack Obama and John McCain say, and what have they done, about policies that matter to Wired? Here are descriptions and analysis on five issues: Broadband, H1B Issues, Investment in Green Tech, Net Neutrality, Spectrum. They may or may not come up in Wednesday’s third and final debate. But that doesn’t mean you have to be uninformed or apathetic. Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Microscope-On-a-Chip Is One Step Closer to the Tricorder   more similar news »
: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com LOS ANGELES, California – In the very near future, drawing blood may be obsolete. Instead, implants will be able to image your blood and monitor it constantly. This is because scientists at Caltech have squeezed a microscope onto a computer chip not much larger than a dime. And that’s just the demo unit. Shrinking a standard microscope to this size is practically impossible due to the layers of optics involved, but Caltech professor Changhuei Yang decided to skip the optics altogether and put microscopic samples almost directly onto a photo sensor chip — just like the one found in your cheap point-and-shoot. The microscope-on-a-chip uses standard, off-the-shelf hardware sensors with a clever modification — pixels on the sensor are forced to only look through microscopic holes, which allows the chip to image very tiny things. The standard hardware makes future mass production cheap and easy and Yang’s lab is already working to create a small batch of iPod-size prototypes. He hopes to have working units in doctor's hands in a year or two, with full production in five5 years. In addition to the handheld devices, Yang envisions blood- monitoring implants that provide instant health warnings and diagnoses. Click through the gallery to learn exactly how this ingenious invention works. Left: A working sample of the microscope-on-a-chip placed next to a dime shows how small it actually is. The part that does most of the work is the... Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Obama v. McCain: The Wired Scorecard   more similar news »
What do Barack Obama and John McCain say, and what have they done, about policies that matter to Wired? Here are descriptions and analysis on five issues: Broadband, H1B Issues, Investment in Green Tech, Net Neutrality, Spectrum. They may or may not come up in Wednesday’s third and final debate. But that doesn’t mean you have to be uninformed or apathetic.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Worth 1,000 Words? Okay. But $2,700?    more similar news »
What is a memory worth? That's the question I asked myself when my computer sounded a little death wheeze a few weeks ago and then stopped working. This is the laptop I bought just before we moved to England two summers ago, the laptop on which I kept all the photographs I took during our European...

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Balancing Defense and the Budget    more similar news »
At the Walter E. Washington Convention Center last week, Army soldiers, Pentagon weapons buyers and defense company representatives milled about a cavernous trade show floor for a look at the latest military equipment and gadgets.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Q&A: John Hodgman on Perfecting the Illusion of Expertise   more similar news »
John Hodgman is an expert. At everything. (OK, maybe not sports.) But where he really excels is in creating the illusion of expertise — and not letting pesky facts intrude on that authority. From his first book, a compendium of faux trivia aptly titled The Areas of My Expertise, to his fiction-spewing shtick on The Daily Show to his role as the bloviating PC in those Mac ads, Hodgman handles the most obscure subjects with an aura of invincible confidence. The fact that it's fake? All the funnier. Hodgman talks to Wired about his latest book, More Information Than You Require (out in October), and his new area of bona fide expertise: being semi-famous. Wired: Is your character on The Daily Show the same person narrating your books? Or, for that matter, the PC in your Mac ads? Hodgman: I should clarify at this point: I'm not that John Hodgman. There's a guy who goes on The Daily Show claiming to be me. And there's a guy who goes on the Mac ads claiming to be me. Wired: You should sue! Hodgman: No, I would say that the Resident Expert on The Daily Show is all me, or at least a heightened aspect of myself. Aside from finding humor in the deadpan descriptions of things precisely as they are, I just veer off into the fantastic and the absurd. Wired: And that has made you slightly famous. Hodgman: Well, I always had this desire to celebrate and somehow be a part of things that I thought were really great. When I wrote about Battlestar Galactica for The New York... Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
more from this source»»
Oct. 13, 1884: Greenwich Resolves Subprime Longitude Crisis   more similar news »
1884: Geographers and astronomers adopt Greenwich as the Prime Meridian, the international standard for zero degrees longitude. The late 19th century was an era of standardization. With the Second Industrial Revolution stimulating world trade, the Treaty of the Meter established the International System of weights and measures in 1875. With railroads linking together entire continents, nations were replacing hundreds (or even thousands) of diverging local times with a system of hour-wide time zones. (The United States adopted its zones in 1883.) Amid all this, navigation at sea -- and the charting of stars in the heavens -- often remained a matter of local, national or even religious preference. Maps might be based on longitude east or west of Jerusalem, Saint Petersburg, Rome, Pisa, Copenhagen (think Tycho Brahe, Oslo, Paris, Greenwich (just east of central London), El Hierro (in the Canary Islands), Philadelphia (former U.S. capital) and Washington, D.C. These divergent reference meridians -- representing a mixture of astronomical, theological and maritime power -- ranged over 112 degrees of longitude. You could do the math, but that meant you did the math. These were the days before computers and even the bulkiest of mechanical calculators. Got abacus? Many state boundaries in the U.S. West were determined by the Washington Meridian, which then ran through the Old Naval Observatory in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood. But an 1850 law established its use "for... Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
more from this source»»
Obama v. McCain: The Wired Scorecard   more similar news »
What do Barack Obama and John McCain say, and what have they done, about policies that matter to Wired? Here are descriptions and analysis on five issues: Broadband, H1B Issues, Investment in Green Tech, Net Neutrality, Spectrum. They may or may not come up in Wednesday’s third and final debate. But that doesn’t mean you have to be uninformed or apathetic. Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
more from this source»»
Microscope-On-a-Chip Is One Step Closer to the Tricorder   more similar news »
: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com LOS ANGELES, California – In the very near future, drawing blood may be obsolete. Instead, implants will be able to image your blood and monitor it constantly. This is because scientists at Caltech have squeezed a microscope onto a computer chip not much larger than a dime. And that’s just the demo unit. Shrinking a standard microscope to this size is practically impossible due to the layers of optics involved, but Caltech professor Changhuei Yang decided to skip the optics altogether and put microscopic samples almost directly onto a photo sensor chip — just like the one found in your cheap point-and-shoot. The microscope-on-a-chip uses standard, off-the-shelf hardware sensors with a clever modification — pixels on the sensor are forced to only look through microscopic holes, which allows the chip to image very tiny things. The standard hardware makes future mass production cheap and easy and Yang’s lab is already working to create a small batch of iPod-size prototypes. He hopes to have working units in doctor's hands in a year or two, with full production in five5 years. In addition to the handheld devices, Yang envisions blood- monitoring implants that provide instant health warnings and diagnoses. Click through the gallery to learn exactly how this ingenious invention works. Left: A working sample of the microscope-on-a-chip placed next to a dime shows how small it actually is. The part that does most of the work is the... Wired.com

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Global stocks: A good start   more similar news »
Stocks in overseas markets were trading higher - though down from earlier highs - the first market signal following the most coordinated effort to date to address the global financial crisis.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Project Management FAQ   more similar news »
Project Management FAQ
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Morgan renegotiating bank deal   more similar news »
Morgan Stanley is engaged in high-stakes talks with a big Japanese bank over a multi-billion capital investment in the embattled Wall Street bank, according to an online report Sunday.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Soros: Officials 'behind the curve'   more similar news »
Outspoken billionaire investor George Soros on Sunday criticized U.S. and European officials for taking too long to effectively address the financial crisis.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Spanish firm eyes takeover of U.S. bank   more similar news »
Spanish bank Banco Santander SA is in "advanced talks" to acquire Philadelphia-based thrift Sovereign Bancorp Inc., the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Gas price drop: Closing in on $3   more similar news »
Gasoline prices extended their slide, dropping more than 4 cents a gallon and coming within 25 cents of breaching the $3 level, according to a daily survey of credit card swipes releases Sunday.

Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Too loud, too long - 10% of MP3 users risk hearing loss   more similar news »
Up to 10% of people have their MP3 players too loud and risk permanent hearing loss, a study suggests
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Deal for Wachovia Wins Fed Approval   more similar news »
The Federal Reserve has approved Wells Fargo’s $11.7 billion acquisition of Wachovia.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Music fans back legal downloads   more similar news »
Nearly three quarters of online music pirates would be be put off by warnings from their internet provider, suggests a survey.
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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Debian Linux Needs Your Help   more similar news »
Cyber Cynic: "The community was doing much better this time for the forthcoming release of Debian 5, Lenny, but some last-minute problems still need cleaning up and the Debian developers would like you to help."
Mon Oct 13, 2008
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