Web development , php , ajax , symfony, framework, zend
In: IT news
14 Mar 2010Tech Today gathers all the biggest technology news of the morning’s Wall Street Journal into one place for your reading pleasure.
Google Prepares to Stop Censoring in China: Google could stop censoring its Web-search results in China within weeks, said people familiar with the matter, but the company isn’t likely to withdraw from the country entirely.
Hearst Tries Hand at Apps: Hearst, best known as a publisher of magazines and newspapers, is jumping into the business of developing software applications, or “apps,” for use on Apple’s iPhone
Pink Floyd Wins Downloads Suit: Britain’s High Court has ordered record company EMI to stop selling downloads of Pink Floyd tracks individually rather than as part of the band’s original albums.
Motorola to Add Bing on Phones: Motorola agreed to add Microsoft’s Bing search and map capabilities on Motorola’s Google-based smart phones.
Intel, AMD Set to Escalate Server Chip Fight: Intel and AMD are overhauling their lines of chips for server systems at a rare time—just as corporate customers’ appetite for new technology finally seems to be improving.
This blog delivers stylish and dynamic news for designers and web-developers on all subjects of design, ranging from: CSS, Ajax, Javascript, web design, graphics, typography, advertising & much more. Our goal is to help you communicate effectively on the web with an engaging website or functional interface.
4 Responses to Tech Today: Google Prepares to Stop Censoring in China; Hearst Tries Hand at Apps
simplicitus
March 17th, 2010 at 2:19 pm
I don't about those; but I do know there are many places all over.
If you are looking for a grocery store, I know that Andronicos carries them. And there are various news kiosks, book stores; etc. (Palo Alto has a traditional news and sundries shop, downtown Berkeley has a big kiosk, and I've seen smaller kiosks at various San Francisco BART stations.
I read the New York Times on line, so haven't looked for places to buy it. So I'd be surprised if there weren't many that I haven't noticed.
mexican_boy_4life
March 20th, 2010 at 6:48 pm
-video camera
-gps
-faster processor
not much… but its worth it.
jdkilp
March 24th, 2010 at 5:36 pm
There are lots of factors. But, I've been in this industry. Having something custom developed in the US for this might be $200,000.
senlin
March 29th, 2010 at 3:25 am
This is not a rare coin. The U.S. mint began making these $1 presidential coins a few years back, mainly as a way to try and get people to use $1 coins instead of paper ones. Eventually, all the presidents will show up on a $1 coin. The coins save money because they last so long. The only way it will ever be worth much more than a dollar is if it is uncirculated or proof – meaning that it was never used. Even then, it is unlikely to be worth a whole lot. The Susan B. Anthony dollars that came out in the 70s are now worth between 2 and 12 dollars, if they are proof or uncirculated.