Newswatch 11.29.07: AT&T says 3G iPhone coming in 08
By Richard Koman - November 29, 2007
AT&T: 3G iPhone coming in 08
[Bloomberg] "You'll have it next year,'' Stephenson said in response to a question about when the 3G iPhone would debut. He said he didn't know how much more the new version will cost than the existing model, which sells for $399. Apple Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs ``will dictate what the price of the phone is,'' he said.
Micron drops price of hard drives
[News.com] Micron will start mass-producing solid-state drives in the first quarter of 2008. The first drives will hold either 32GB or 64GB of memory. While that's less than half the capacity of the average notebook drive today, it's actually more storage than most business users need, said Dean Klein, vice president of memory system development at Micron. Plus, solid-state notebooks can come out of a deep sleep or launch applications far more rapidly.
Administration must turn over spying docs on Friday
[News.com] U.S. District Judge Susan Illston in San Francisco gave the Office of the Director of National Intelligence until November 30 (Friday) to turn over documents relating to conversations it had with Congress and telecommunications carriers about how to rewrite wiretapping laws.
The client-side security chasm
[NYT] Holes in so-called client-side applications, including Web browsers, e-mail clients, productivity suites, and media players, have become particularly worrisome over the last year, according to SANS, which highlighted the issue as part of its annual report on the top 20 Internet security risks for 2007.
Parents of teen suicide call for jail time for neighbor
[ABC] The family of Megan Meier, the 13-year-old girl who took her own life after being bullied on MySpace, is demanding justice and jail time for the adult involved in the bullying.
Media outlets looking for more control of search
[AP] The current system doesn't give sites ''enough flexibility to express our terms and conditions on access and use of content,'' said Angela Mills Wade, executive director of the European Publishers Council, one of the organizations behind the proposal. ''That is not surprising. It was invented in the 1990s and things move on.''
Toddlers want computers for Christmas
[NYT] Toy makers and retailers are filling shelves with new tech devices for children ages 3 and up, and sometimes even down. They say they are catering to junior consumers who want to emulate their parents and are not satisfied with fake gadgets.
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