PhotoRecovery® 2010
Just back from vacation and read Jennifer Apple's post on this tool. I keep this one with me on a thumb drive when I'm out and about. If you're not familiar with it check out Jennifer's post at photoshopsupport.com.
Tenure, too, you might say. BTW, you can be an ass. A real hateful idiot, who preaches more than practices. Good on you. I can too.
Trying to minimize that. Try it. You might like it.
Oh, almost forgot, starting a new podcast, apparently. The Seven Five - Part 2
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blog posts by Larry A. Compton
"You can't win, Darth. If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine." - Obi-Wan Kenobi
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Just back from vacation and read Jennifer Apple's post on this tool. I keep this one with me on a thumb drive when I'm out and about. If you're not familiar with it check out Jennifer's post at photoshopsupport.com.
It's the video millennium. Every modern mobile phone is a video camera and a video player. Video displays are everywhere, from taxicabs to endcaps. Webcams perch like pigeons on every major tourist destination in the world. So it's no surprise that video sharing has become an industry, and that legal controversy has followed. The Southern District of New York recently announced its much-anticipated decision in Viacom International Inc. v. YouTube Inc., 2010 WL 2532404 (S.D.N.Y. June 23, 2010), granting summary judgment in favor of YouTube. The decision breaks no new ground, but it continues a trend: Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, owners of copyrights to videos will have the burden of policing the internet.
Full story:
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1202466695461
It's a familiar scene in movies and on TV: a character, seeking to understand an issue involving computers, proclaims that an "expert" is needed. A teen is then brought on screen or referenced in dialogue.
The scene is funny because it illustrates something with which the audience is familiar anecdotally: the "digital divide."
While computer literacy is not universal, neither is it rare.
Complete Story w/Case Law References - click here
By Joseph L. Flatley
Toshiba announced a new self-encrypting disk technology today, which is sure to be welcome news to the those of you who work with sensitive data, wish to keep your extensive True Blood fanfiction collection under wraps, or are just plain paranoid. The imaginatively named Wipe ships with the company's TCG-spec'd Self-Encrypting Drive models, allowing sysadmins to securely erase user data when a machine powers down, when an encrypted HDD is removed from the system, or when a leased machine is returned to its owner. And this ain't just for PCs -- the system is also designed to work with your copier and / or printer system. Interested? Of course you are!
Check out the complete PR:
http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/10/toshiba-wipe-deletes-your-encrypted-data-so-you-dont-have-to/
Trying to snap a shot of your cherry red Mazda, but can't keep your hands still? You'll find all the tech you need to smooth things out in an iPhone 4 or (MotionPlus-equipped) Nintendo Wiimote. Experimenting with 6DOF inertial measurement sensor packages, scientists at Microsoft Research have developed a software algorithm that literally records your exposure-destroying shake via accelerometer and gyroscope, then magically removes the blur by canceling it out.
Full Story:
http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/02/microsoft-algorithm-uses-six-axis-motion-sensors-to-fix-blurry-s/