Internet

California judge rules early cell phone termination fees illegal

In one of the most significant legal rulings in the tech industry this year, a Superior Court judge in California has ruled that the practice of charging consumers a fee for ending their cell phone contract early is illegal and violates state law.

The preliminary, tentative judgment orders Sprint Nextel to pay customers $18.2 million in reimbursements and, more importantly, orders Sprint to stop trying to collect another $54.7 million from California customers (some 2 million customers total) who have canceled their contracts but refused or failed to pay the termination fee.

While an appeal is inevitable, the ruling could have massive fallout throughout the industry. Without the threat of levying early termination fees, the cellular carriers lose the power that’s enabled them to lock customers into contracts for multiple years at a time. And while those contracts can be heinously long, they also let the carriers offer cell phone hardware at reduced (subsidized) prices. AT&T’s two-year contract is the only reason the iPhone 3G costs $199. If subsidies vanish, what happens to hardware lock-in? Could an era of expensive, but unlocked, hardware be just around the corner? It’s highly probable. Read more » »


August 1st, 2008 | No Comments »

Tate Kids Launches Online Art Competition For Kids

The Tate Kids has launches online art competition for kids. What do you like drawing or painting? Music and nature? If so, have a go at this fantastic competition from Tate, BT and The Woodland Trust.

Every summer there is a huge music festival on the Isle of Wight called (funnily enough) the Isle of Wight Festival.

The festival happens outside in a great big park and is both the inspiration and the prize for the competition.

Winners get family tickets to the festival on the 13th-15th of June as well as lots of other goodies!


June 15th, 2008 | No Comments »

Symantec anti-virus software with beta versions

The latest version Symantec of their corporate anti-virus software, codenamed Hamlet. The Beta versions have been in closed testing since March 2007. Symantec has not yet announced the official name for this new next-generation product that integrates firewall, zero-day protection and network access control features into this all-in-one anti-virus product. Read more » »


May 9th, 2008 | No Comments »

Available Spyware Doctor with AntiVirus 5.5

Version 5 of the popular Spyware Doctor utility was a complete rewrite, and it had a few rough edges. Spyware Doctor with AntiVirus 5.5 (SDAV 5.5) has smoothed out those imperfections, and my testing shows that it’s more thorough and accurate than ever. With this version, PC Tools promises numerous under-the-hood enhancements to armor-plate your system without bogging down performance—and it delivers Read more » »


April 19th, 2008 | No Comments »

Free Comodo Firewall Pro 3.0

(pcmag) “The moon belongs to everyone, the best things in life are free.” So goes the old song, though it’s rarely true in real life. Thus, I’m always pleased to find an exception like the Comodo Firewall Pro 3.0 (CFP). And it isn’t just free for noncommercial use—it’s free to all, period. According to Comodo CEO Melih Abdulhayoglu, it will remain free indefinitely.

New version has a refined-looking user interface without the separate Comodo Launch Pad used by version 2.0: Future add-ins will plug directly into CFP. Its main screen shows overall system status, much as many security suites do. It also includes Comodo news, a tip of the day, and links to configure program features. Most suites display a red warning if you turn off a significant security element, but CFP figures that if you turned it off you must have meant it. CFP shows a red X only if there’s something actively wrong with the configuration, in which case it offers a link to a built-in diagnostic that could fix the problem. Read more » »


April 19th, 2008 | No Comments »

Free Comodo Firewall Pro 3.0

(pcmag) “The moon belongs to everyone, the best things in life are free.” So goes the old song, though it’s rarely true in real life. Thus, I’m always pleased to find an exception like the Comodo Firewall Pro 3.0 (CFP). And it isn’t just free for noncommercial use—it’s free to all, period. According to Comodo CEO Melih Abdulhayoglu, it will remain free indefinitely.

New version has a refined-looking user interface without the separate Comodo Launch Pad used by version 2.0: Future add-ins will plug directly into CFP. Its main screen shows overall system status, much as many security suites do. It also includes Comodo news, a tip of the day, and links to configure program features. Most suites display a red warning if you turn off a significant security element, but CFP figures that if you turned it off you must have meant it. CFP shows a red X only if there’s something actively wrong with the configuration, in which case it offers a link to a built-in diagnostic that could fix the problem. Read more » »


April 19th, 2008 | No Comments »

Super Smash Bros. Brawl for Wii ships March 9th

Super Smash Bros. Brawl for the Nintendo Wii is shipping on March 9th. You can pre-order the highly anticipated new game for the Wii on Amazon.com for $49.99.

This is the 3rd installment in Nintendo’s popular Super Smash Bros. fighter franchise now set to debut on the Nintendo Wii.
In Super Smash Bros. Brawl for Wii you can play against registered friends or randomly selected opponents from anyplace in the world via a Nintendo Wi-Fi connection.
More details and game play video on Amazon.com.


February 25th, 2008 | No Comments »