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Dienstag, 28. Januar 2014 00:00:00 Technik News
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Grund ist vor allem der anhaltende Rückgang von Werbeeinnahmen.

Aktie sank um sechs Prozent, weil Börsianer mit höherem Umsatz rechneten.

Die Agenturinhaberin Andrea Mustafi stellt sich selbst ins Zentrum.

Ort, Alter und Geschlecht der "Angry Birds"-Spieler im Visier.

Neue iPhones und iPads

Das berufliche Netzwerk ist auf Wachstumskurs.

Die neue Website soll das Best Western modernisieren.

400 Millionen Dollar für DeepMind Technologies ausgegeben.

Schnell mal was nachschlagen: Früher griff man dazu zum Brockhaus, heute schaut man auf Wikipedia nach. Aber wie funktioniert die Online-Wissensdatenbank eigentlich genau? Wie zuverlässig ist sie? Und wie viele Schweizerinnen und Schweizer sind bislang dem Spendenaufruf gefolgt? Ein Interview mit Patrick Kenel, langjährigem Wikipedia-Autoren und ehrenamtlichem Präsidenten von Wikimedia CH.

Prophylaktisch alle Internet-Fernsehkanäle gesperrt.

Bitcoin could gain widespread acceptance if clear government rules are put in place, but burdensome regulations could clip the wings of a fledgling industry, some of the biggest names in Bitcoin investing said at a New York public hearing Tuesday. New York Superintendent of Financial Services Benjamin Lawsky made it clear that some sort of state regulatory guidelines are on the way this year. The hearing, which runs through Wednesday, is part of a fact-finding investigation started last August “and will allow us to put forth a proposed regulatory framework for virtual currency firms. We believe we’ll be the first state to do that,” Lawsky said.

Nintendo will not bring games to cell phones. Not yet, anyway.

While there's no word on exact release timing, HTC says certification should be complete this week.

A vulnerability in Android allows malicious applications to bypass an active VPN (virtual private network) connection and force traffic from the device through an attacker-controlled system where it can be intercepted, according to security researchers from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel. Researchers from the university’s Cyber Security Labs initially

A hidden feature in Gmail can tell you if someone's been rummaging through your love letters. Here's where to find it.

At long last, Glass can double as proper glasses.

The new social app from Twitter co-founder Biz Stone is a fun time-waster, but it just doesn't seem, well, very useful.

I’ve been using

With Microsoft’s deadline for the end of Windows XP support looming ever larger, Dell’s KACE division launched a new version of its deployment appliance that can upgrade 250 PCs simultaneously. Version 3.6 of the Dell KACE K2000 deployment appliance adds multicasting, allowing the appliance to rapidly deploy new operating systems and applications. The same image is transferred to multiple clients just once over the network. The apppliance itself can manage up to 100 nodes, and supports Android, iOS, various Microsoft Windows OSes plus Mac OS as well.  A new task engine allows the appliance to manage installations that require multiple reboots, allowing buyers of the $4500 appliance to perform “lights-out” operations at off hours. The appliance remains the same; existing customers can also download the 3.6 upgrade for free, Dell said.

Technology companies will be allowed to reveal more details about government data requests under a tentative agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice. The deal announced on Monday is in line with efforts by President Barack Obama’s administration to create more transparency about law enforcement and national security orders. The agreement, which must be approved by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, enables “communications providers to make public more information than ever before about the orders they have received to provide data to the government,” according to a

The early Wi-Fi standards that opened the world’s eyes to wire-free networking are now holding back the newer, faster protocols that followed in their wake, Cisco Systems said. The IEEE 802.11 standard, now available in numerous versions with speeds up to 6.9Gbps (bits per second) and growing, still requires devices and access points to be compatible with technologies that date to the late 1990s. But those older standards—the once-popular 802.11b and an even slower spec from 1997—aren’t nearly as efficient as most Wi-Fi being sold today. As a result, Cisco thinks the 802.11 Working Group and the Wi-Fi Alliance should find a way to let some wireless gear leave those versions behind. Two Cisco engineers proposed that idea last week in a presentation at the working group’s meeting in Los Angeles. Their plan drew some debate from others who expect a new wave of low-power Wi-Fi gear to emerge for the so-called “Internet of Things.”

Two operators of BitInstant, an online Bitcoin exchange business, were arrested for money laundering tied to the sale of illegal drugs using Bitcoin, facing 25 years or longer in prison, the Manhattan U.S. attorney said Monday. Charlie Shrem, CEO at BitInstant, and Robert Faiella, the site’s compliance officer, were charged with scheming to sell more than $1 million worth of bitcoins to users of “Silk Road,” an online black market designed to facilitate the sale of items like drugs and guns anonymously. The two knowingly contributed to facilitating the drug sales on Silk Road, earning substantial profits along the way, according to a