Skip to main content

Posts

Fast & Furious actor Paul Walker dies in California car crash

US actor Paul Walker who starred in the Fast & Furious series of action films has been killed in a car crash in California, his publicist says. A statement on his Facebook page said Walker, 40, had been a passenger in a friend's car which crashed north of Los Angeles. He was said to be attending a charity event at the time. He starred in The Fast and The Furious in 2001 and featured in the sixth film in the franchise which opened in May. Walker also starred in the suspense drama Hours, a movie that is set for release this month. The Los Angeles County Sheriff's department said the crash happened in the community of Valencia . Actor Paul Walker — a self-styled adrenaline junkie best known for his role in "The Fast and the Furious" movies — was killed Saturday in a fiery single-car wreck in Southern California. The 40-year-old Walker was riding in a Porsche GT about 3:30 p.m. when the driver lost co
Recent posts

Adobe got hacked and about 150 million people’s account details have been leaked.

Adobe got hacked and about 150 million people’s account details have been leaked. You should be aware that the passwords are encrypted with a single key using a symmetric and reversible algorithm.   This means when anyone figures out the key to decrypt the passwords, they'll be able to decrypt every single password on the list, no matter how strong or random your password was.   So far no one has been able to reverse-engineer the Adobe decryption key, but it's probably a matter of time.   This could all have been avoided if Adobe had used a cryptographic hash function.

Red Hat Delivers More Tools, Services for Enterprise OpenStack

Red Hat has integrated OpenStack with the new version of Red Hat CloudForms ( 3.0 ), which helps manage public, private, and hybrid clouds. It also announced several new efforts in support of the company's open hybrid cloud vision, including beta availability of Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform 4.0, advancements to drive OpenShift by Red Hat on OpenStack, and a preview of OpenStack-M.

GCC Looks To Turn Off Java, Replace With Go Or ADA

GCC developers from multiple companies are beginning to reach agreement that it's time for Java to be turned off by default in GCC. The Java compiler support in GCC is in the form of GCJ, but it doesn't see much active development these days with more of the Java work happening in OpenJDK. Developers are looking to disable Java from the default GCC build process but to potentially replace it with the Go or ADA languages.  With the open-source Java toolchain development having shifted from GCJ to OpenJDK years ago, Jeff Law of Red Hat characters the current state of Java in GCC as "moved from active development into a deep maintenance mode." GCJ seldom sees new development work and its usage isn't great either, but as of right now it's still built by default when compiling GCC.  Jeff Law volleyed a mailing list thread on Friday entitled  Replace Java with Go in default languages . So far GCC developers from various companies seem to be in agreement on dropping

Google+ Rolls Out Restricted Communities for Corporate Users

Google this week rolled out a new Google+ security feature for organizations intended to help them keep certain conversations private from the larger Web. Much like Microsoft's Yammer, Google+ restricted communities will only allow access to approved employees. "Whether it's designs of your beta product or notes from your team off-site, anything you post will remain restricted to the organization," Google+ product manager Michael Cai wrote in a blog post. Community administrators can decide whether the site will remain open to everyone at the company, or kept private by invitation only. Google+ also allows for people outside of your domain — clients, agencies, business partners — to join the conversation.

Twitter’s Market Valuation Suggests Wall St. Sees Huge Growth Potential

Twitter  is a young company generating large losses as it competes in a highly uncertain sector of the economy. And that is exactly why investors clamored for a piece of its initial public offering, which closed on Wednesday evening. Twitter’s shares were priced at $26, giving the company an overall value of $18.1 billion, including stock that the company is likely to issue to employees. That makes Twitter worth more than many storied American corporations, like Alcoa and Harley-Davidson. At that valuation, each of Twitter’s 230 million users around the world is worth $78. Going by such numbers, the public offering has been a tremendous success for the company, which raised $1.8 billion from the offering, a hefty war chest. All this is impressive for a company that has racked up more than $300 million of losses in the last three years — and may not show real profits until 2015. But investors are betting that Twitter is virtually destined to become wildly profitable as advert

Feedly launches 'Feedly Cloud' sync platform, new web interface

Feedly, one of the leading Google Reader replacement services, announced major restructuring of its services today with a new cloud infrastructure and web interface. Posted on its official blog, Feedly unveiled what it calls "Feedly Cloud", a scalable infrastructure it says is ready to replace Google Reader. The new Feedly Cloud provides several benefits, the first of which is one-click import from Google Reader -- new users to the service can now simply pull everything over seamlessly from their Google account and start using Feedly right away. Existing users will simply have to make sure that they have the latest version of Feedly installed, and their accounts will be migrated to Feedly Cloud over the next few days. Additionally, the new service allowed Feedly to create a stand-alone web interface (found simply at cloud.feedly.com) that works in all major browsers without plugins or extensions. The transition to Feedly Cloud has another benefit, and that is the abilit