Aug 24

Coca-Cola is king, but technology companies are common in the top 25 brands.

Coca-Cola remains the top, with a $66.7 billion in brand value, but technology companies are well represented on the list. No. 5 is Nokia, Intel No. 7, Hewlett-Packard No. 12, Cisco No. 17, Samsung No. 21, Oracle No. 23, and Sony No. 25.

Microsoft slipped from second to third place, edged down a peg by IBM, according to the study by BusinessWeek and Interbrand, which base their results on the value of the brand as judged by how much revenue it will likely earn for the company.

Google’s brand name value jumped from 20th place last year to 10th in 2008, according to the latest version of an annual study that ranks the best brands, with only four technology companies ahead of it on the list.

Google showed the strongest gain, with a value that increased 43 percent to $25.6 billion, the study said. Next in line was 24th-place Apple, whose brand value rose 24 percent to $13.7 billion.

(Credit:
BusinessWeek/Interbrand)

Aug 24

Next, double-click OpenOffice.org Writer in the left pane, choose Compatibility, and check these options:
Use printer metrics for document formatting
Add spacing between paragraphs and tables (in current document)
Add paragraph and table spacing at tops of pages (in current document)
Do not add leading (extra space) between lines of text
Add paragraph and table spacing at bottom of table cells
Consider wrapping style when positioning objects
Expand word space on lines with manual line breaks in justified paragraphs

To ensure smooth file transfers between OpenOffice.org Writer and Microsoft Word, select these options in Writer's Compatibility settings.

Keep it simple: Word files with complex graphics, nested tables, fancy fonts and formatting, and OLE Objects belong in Word and Word only. OOo Writer uses public-domain fonts primarily, and many of the fonts in Word are proprietary. If you know you’ll be moving files between the word processors regularly, use only common fonts, such as Arial, Helvetica, and Times Roman. Keep in mind, however, that fonts may share the same name and still be incompatible (Garamond is an example). You can import proprietary fonts to OOo Writer, but make sure you have licenses for them.

The first few times I worked on Word files in the OpenOffice.org Writer program, I was satisfied if the documents opened at all. That’s a long way from being able to trust the open-source app with a Word file from your boss that you need to work on and return with all functions and formatting intact. These steps won’t guarantee trouble-free file transfers between Word and OOo Writer, but they’ll help you prevent some of the most common conversion glitches.

Tweak OOo Writer to work with Word: Open Writer and click File > New > Text Document. Select Tools > Options, double-click Load/Save in the left pane, and choose
Microsoft Office. Make sure all the options in the right window are checked. Now click VBA Properties and ensure that all these options are checked (they should be by default). OpenOffice.org apps don’t support macros and other VBA scripts, but they will preserve them so that the files will retain them when they’re reopened in the original Office program.

Here are a few other formatting inconsistencies to keep in mind:
Many of Writer’s advanced features aren’t supported in Word, such as page breaks and custom hyphenation. The last line of Writer’s justified paragraphs could generate line or page breaks in Word. Writer files that use Outline Numbering may not save as Word docs, and nested tables in Writer documents don’t convert to Word. Writer retains Word’s character and paragraph styles fairly well, but graphics aligned in Word as characters don’t convert to Writer.

Choose Microsoft Word 97/2000/XP under 'Always save as' in OpenOffice.org Writer's default file format options.

Finally, click Use as Default > Yes > OK to use these settings in all new documents.

If a Word font isn’t installed in OOo Writer, the program will substitute one of its own fonts, which can mess up your document’s formatting. If you have to preserve the appearance of a file you’re going to share, consider saving it as a PDF. This makes it more difficult for the recipient to work on it, of course.

Wednesday: Give viewers control of your PowerPoint slide show.

Select these options in OpenOffice.org Writer to preserve Word features the open-source word processor doesn't support.

To make Word’s .doc file format the default in OOo Writer, click General under Load/Save, choose Text document as the Document type under Default file format in the right window, and choose Microsoft Word 97/2000/XP in the drop-down menu under Always save as.

Aug 24

When we were at the GSMA World Congress two months ago, the Samsung Soul was the cell phone from which we couldn’t escape. Gigantic Soul posters papered every part of Barcelona, from the airport to the convention center. All that hype can make you a little weary, but we were glad to hear today that the phone will make it into the hands of consumers. Starting this month and continuing into May, the Soul will land at major wireless carriers in France, the United Kingdom, and Germany. As usual, U.S. carriers are holding back, if they decide to pick it up at all, but Samsung is promising that the Soul eventually will be sold in most GSM markets as an unlocked model. Retail price will be about $635 (400 euros).

(Credit:
Samsung)

Samsung Soul

During the brief period we played with it in Barcelona, it seemed to perform well. A full assessment will come just as soon as we can get our hands on a review model. But in the meantime, check out our Samsung GSMA slide show.

In case you don’t recall, the Soul is an attractive slider phone with a sleek design and a unique touch-pad navigation control. The well-stocked feature set includes a 5-megapixel camera, a music player, Bluetooth, a speakerphone, 100MB of internal memory with room for a 6GB memory card, messaging and e-mail, and various personal organizer functions. Though it is quad-band (GSM 850/900/1800/1900), it’s optimized for European 3G bands only.

Aug 24

Acer has played catchup to its PC rivals this past year, growing organically as well as through acquisition. The company bought U.S.-based Gateway and Europe’s Packard Bell, and now finds itself behind No. 2 Dell with 9 percent of worldwide market share, according to IDC.

At its first-quarter investor relations conference in Taipei on Wednesday, Acer President Gianfranco Lanci said the company would release its first smartphone–a Windows Mobile device–by the end of this year or early next year, and that smartphones will account for 10 percent of company revenue.

But will Acer be able to stir up the smartphone industry the way it has PCs? It’s obviously not impossible for a new smartphone maker to enter the market and quickly scoop up share (hello,
iPhone), but Acer is obviously no Apple. It doesn’t have the same marketing machine or demonstrated design chops. But it doesn’t have to make the next iPhone to find success. Betting on the evolution of mobile computing from laptops to a smart device like a phone is a no-brainer at this point.

Acer: Smartphone is due in the next year.

Acer made its interest in the smartphone market very clear in March, when it purchased fellow Taiwanese company E-Ten, which makes smartphones under the Glofiish brand.

Up-and-coming PC maker Acer is shifting its lineup a bit.

At the conference, Acer said E-Ten would shift entirely to smartphones and away from PDAs, which it has sold in the past. In another change, the new Acer smartphone will be sold through wireless carriers, instead of directly to retail, as E-Ten has historically done.

(Credit:
E-Ten)

Aug 24

Then again, who pays for first class on Virgin Air?

East Japan Railway Co. (JR East) will introduce super-first class
cars on a new extension to its bullet train routes in 2010. The luxuries, according to the Japanese paper Mainichi Shimbun, are to exceed the already comfy-looking green cars on the tracks.

On the train in Japan, “green” does not refer to the environment. Nor to the color of money, as the extreme amounts necessary to buy “green” tickets there are colored in the generally neutral tones of 10,000 yen bills. Soon there will be “super-green” to take even more of your hard-earned gray.

The newer trains will also have a new maximum speed of 320kph (199mph). After a two-week trip enjoying the all-country JR train pass (which cost me, but was worth it), I wonder who could possibly need a more luxurious train than the already clean, orderly, and quiet cars I had on even the less expensive Hikari trains.

Aug 24

Online document-hosting service Docstoc on Thursday is introducing a useful new tool for PCs and Macs that will automatically back up and sync documents from your hard drive to your Docstoc account.

By default, the syncing application goes for your documents folder, though you can set it to sync up with other folders on your hard drive or folders within your home network. Documents that are automatically updated get set as private, so others will not be able to see them, but you can set specific folders as public too.

Docstoc creator and CEO Jason Lawrence Nazar tells me that future versions of the syncing tool will include bidirectional syncing, meaning that changes made to documents in the cloud can be pushed back to your local machine. This should be coming in “weeks.”

If you’re a
Mac user running Leopard, you’ve been able to do this with the proper quick-look plug-ins, but this is all on the Web.

Docstoc now offers a bird's-eye view of your Web documents, complete with live previews and editing. Using the new utility, you can also have it sync up all the documents from your hard drive.

To help manage all these files, the document home screen has also been given an overhaul that the company is calling MyDocs. It offers a little bit more than the documents folder on your computer, with simple thumbnail views, as well as a quick preview mode that lets you open up documents of any size and nearly any file type in about a second.

Related:
New Microsoft Office competition from Zoho, Zooos

(Credit:
Docstoc)

Considering the growing trend of Netbooks with relatively little built-in storage, users with this desktop application installed with be able to offload whatever they created without having worry about running out of room.

In the meantime, a company called Dropbox (review) has been offering something similar. It also requires special desktop software to get the job done.

Aug 24

“The way Apple thought would be best for iPhone users” isn’t a new concept: The company has tightly controlled what kind of applications are allowed access to the App Store–albeit sometimes without clear policy. But Apple telling Google what to do? Now that’s interesting. The companies have a history together, such as when Google was allowed access to unpublished iPhone APIs for its Mobile app. And of course, Google CEO Eric Schmidt is on Apple’s board of directors.

In announcing Latitude for iPhone, a Google blog post noted that the application works much the same way as on other platforms like Android, Symbian, Blackberry, and Windows Mobile. It allows you to show your location on a map so that friends may find you.

There’s also good news for Google here. It’s a company that loves the Web and wants everyone to be on it. So Apple forcing the company to make a Web-based version of its own application is perhaps not exactly a punishment. Plus, it pushes Google to improve the overall experience of Web apps, the
mobile browser experience, and HTML.

Apple’s reason given for why the iPhone version of the Latitude is crippled is, as Google notes, that Apple was afraid people would get confused between a Google Maps app and a Google Latitude app. How? And why isn’t Apple worried about this in other areas? For example, a brief search of the App Store reveals approximately 13 To-Do List applications and 30 streaming music apps. There doesn’t seem to be concern about customer confusion for those two categories of apps. But there shouldn’t be, since most people will just figure it out.

The big exception for the iPhone version is that you have to use the service in the
Safari Web browser. As for why, Google put it this way: “We worked closely with Apple to bring Latitude to the iPhone in a way Apple thought would be best for iPhone users. After we developed a Latitude application for the iPhone, Apple requested we release Latitude as a Web application in order to avoid confusion with Maps on the iPhone, which uses Google to serve maps tiles.”

Google on Thursday released a version of its Latitude mobile application for the
iPhone. But Apple, curiously, has decreed that it be a Web-based app and not a native iPhone app, which has raised some eyebrows.

(Credit:
CNET/Screenshot by Josh Lowensohn)

So from where exactly does this concern come? Perhaps Apple has a similar feature coming for the iPhone that it doesn’t want competition for. If not, the solution appears simple: Why not just make Latitude a feature of Google Maps instead of a separate app? Clearly, there are a lot of unanswered questions.

Latitude is a Web app only on the iPhone.

Aug 24

It really doesn’t get any better than this. I went skiing for a half day up to Alta (Motto: Great skiing and no snowboarders, please) and came away drenched in powder. I also got to put Mountain Hardwear’s and North Face’s latest gear through its paces. (Both passed with flying colors.)

Take a look at what you’re missing:

Which begs the question. You don’t live in Utah…why?

P.S. I’m the one in the orange coat.

commentary

Aug 24

Dear Mr. Mahony:

[Editor's Note: Below is the text of a e-mail thread between EFF's Jennifer Granick and MBTA attorney Ieuan-Gael Mahony. One topic is whether the EFF will agree to enter into nonbinding mediation, which MBTA would prefer. Another is MBTA's complaint about a "large amount of misinformation" circulating in the press. Any transcription errors arising from placing the e-mail messages into HTML format are ours, not theirs.]

MIT students Alessandro Chiesa, R.J. Ryan, and Zack Anderson show up at, but do not speak at, the Defcon conference in Las Vegas on Saturday.

Jennifer:
We are considering your proposal. We are having a meeting of senior management on this and related issues this afternoon at 1:30 eastern. I will report our response as soon as it is complete.
I will continue to keep you posted,
leuan
Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Handheld (www.BlackBerry.net)

This email is to follow up on my phone call to you of just a few minutes ago. As you know, Mr. Anderson, Mr. Ryan and Mr. Chiesa provided your client MBTA with a confidential three page summary of their research and recommendations for securing the fare collection system. It has just come to our attention through third parties at the Defcon conference that plaintiffs have made this report publicly available on the court’s pacer website by filing the document as an exhibit. This confidential document contains the checksum information without which an attacker can not create a forged card. This information is highly sensitive, which is why my clients planned to withhold it from their presentation. We strongly urge you to take emergency measures to have it removed expeditiously.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is providing a legal defense to the MIT students–Zack Anderson, R.J. Ryan, and Alessandro Chiesa–plans on Thursday to ask O’Toole to dissolve the restraining order completely.

A different judge who was on duty on Saturday gave the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority an order prohibiting the students from discussing or publishing information that might let anyone “circumvent or otherwise attack the security of the Fare Media System.”

From: Jennifer Granick [mailto:jennifer@eff.org]
Sent: Saturday, August 09, 2008 5:14 PM
To: Mahony, leuan (BOS - X75835)
Cc: Cindy Conn; Kurt Opsahl; Marcia Hofmann
Subject: CRITICAL INFORMATION: MBTA v Anderson et al

From: Jennifer Granick
To: Mahony, leuan (BOS - X75835)
Cc: cindy@eff.org ; kurt@eff.org ; marcia@eff.org ; WMitchell@mbta.com ; SDarling@mbta.com
Sent: Mon Aug 11 00:26:42 2008
Subject: Re: CRITICAL INFORMATION: MBTA v Anderson et al

On Aug 10, 2008, at 12:18 PM, wrote:
Dear Jennifer:
Let me address your email and phone call from yesterday, and also return to earlier discussions over a “moving-forward” relationship between the parties.
(A) Your Email First, we want to thank you for your concern. Second, as I indicated earlier today, the MBTA, along with a system vendor, has completed its review of your email, and re-reviewed the three page summary report attached as Exhibit 1 to Scott Henderson’s Declaration (the “Report”). This review does not alter the original assessment of the Report, provided by Mr. Henderson in his declaration. Yet it is the case that (a) the quantity and quality of information provided by the three page Report, standing alone, is less than (b) the quantity and quality of the information provided by the Report read in combination with the Students’ 87 page presentation entitled “Anatomy of a Subway Hack” (the “Presentation”). If the MBTA had been given the Presentation when first requested (or even at the time when the Presentation , we understand, was made available to DEFCON attendees), the “(b)” circumstance might have been avoided. In any event, the MBTA’s evaluators do not assess the risk of this information at the level you set in your email. The MBTA, with vendor support, has begun work on internal responses to the potential security risks at issue. It is our view that an internal, technical and personnel response is the best long-term solution. Accordingly, we do not share your view that legal “emergency measures” are required. We do not think that seeking court relief on this issue and at this point is appropriate. Again, thank you for your concern.
(B) Moving-Forward Relationships We can see from your clients’ statements in the press, and the EFF’s public statements, that the lawsuit generally, and Temporary Restraining Order in particular, do not from your perspectives represent a fair or balanced situation. From my first conversations with Marcia and Kurt, and then later with you, Jennifer, I stated my view that parties, acting reasonably, will invariably develop and implement a resolution of a dispute that is substantially better tailored to their interests than a resolution imposed on them by an external authority. We think we should continue discussions, to see if we can find a solution that is better tailored to all parties’ interests. In my view, Judge Woodlock, in his findings and rulings, directed the parties to work toward a solution perhaps more “creative” and “outside the box” than the standard “keep fighting in court over abstract issues while life goes by”. The goal would be to shift from an adversarial mode to a cooperative, discussion mode, if possible. We respect your clients’ continued statements that their goal remains to provide solutions to security risks. We propose formal mediation as the process for seeking a more optimal going-forward solution. We think we should reserve a full day, or perhaps two. We suggest that the mediation take place in Boston. Other issues, such as mediator costs, whether formal “written submissions” are exchanged, and the like we can discuss.
Let us know your thoughts.
Thanks
leuan

Best wishes,
Jennifer Granick
Civil Liberties Director
Electronic Frontier Foundation
454 Shotwell Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415.436.9333×134
fax 415.436.9993
jennifer@eff.org

(Credit:
Declan McCullagh/News.com)

From: Mahony, leuan (BOS - X75835)
Sent: Sunday, August 10, 2008 9:27 AM
To: ‘Jennifer Granick’
Cc: Cindy Conn; Kurt Opsahl; Marcia Hofmann; Mahony, leuan (BOS - X75835)
Subject: RE: CRITICAL INFORMATION: MBTA v Anderson et al

Jennifer:
We are unwilling to lift the TRO in the binary “on/off” manner you state, and respond more fully to your email as follows:
(A) Removing the TRO Is Not a Tailored Solution We are willing to discuss tailored solutions to the underlying problem, and have proposed a formal mediation process for these discussions. You have given no response to our proposal for mediation. You recall that I asked for a negotiated solution before the Saturday hearing. I confirmed these inquiries to you in email, and these emails are public record and freely available on the web. See http://www-tech.mit.edu/V128/N30/subway.html. You did not respond meaningfully to those requests, either.
(B) Misinformation Threatens To Cloud the Issues In following the DEFCON-related press, it is clear that a large amount of misinformation has been circulated concerning the meaning of the TRO, and related points. For example, you know, because Judge Woodlock asked you these questions in open court, that the primary concern was with the content the students might or might not supply to go with the literal expression embodied in the Presentation, as well as the Report. Press reports suggest that the TRO banned circulation of the paper materials themselves. You know this is incorrect.
Yet your email relies on this theme. We made it clear in our papers: based on the information we have (a large part of which you intentionally withheld from us until 4:38 AM Saturday morning) we do not know what your clients have done or are capable of doing. Their broad statements concerning “free subway rides for life” suggest they are capable of a lot. This is the concern. We would like to create an environment, immediately, where all parties can share the information they feel is warranted, in order to quantify and assess this risk. We would like to “re-do” the August 5 (or 4) meeting, but with more sensitivity, hopefully all around, as to the mutual stakes.
We think a mediated solution presents mutual benefits. The structure of non-binding mediation assures mutual benefits - or at a minimum a clear assessment of the alternatives to a negotiated solution. In a mediation process, for example, we would hope to discuss and obtain an understanding of the information, if any, the MIT Undgrads hold that might threaten Fare Media System security. We do not set preconditions on a mediation, however, as we stongly believe - again - that discussions between reasonable parties toward a resolution are preferable to an externally imposed resolution, where it is possible to avoid such an external resolution.
(C) We Are Very Sensitive To Your Clients’ Concerns Over The Restraint Finally, we believe we understand the point in your email that the TRO “continues to hang over our clients’ heads, making them uncertain what if anything they can say about their research and this case.” One goal with a mediated solution, working together, would be to reduce or eliminate uncertainty (to the extent uncertainty from a legal or practical perspective exists). Another goal of a mediated solution would be to determine other parameters of responsible disclosure under these circumstances. Yet another goal with a mediated solution might be to “make amends” on all sides, whatever that might mean here. There are countless examples from large to small of relationships that are polarized and entrenched-hostile because of bad choices by both sides shortly after the rift began. We would like to avoid this here, if possible. We think talking in a non-binding, professionally mediated environment is the best way to avoid further misunderstanding, and potential “bad choices.”
(D) Conclusion: Renewed Request for Mediation You request, in an “on/off” manner, that we now “shut off’ the TRO. This is traditional advocacy, where the goal is to “win all” and avoid “lose all.” With our mediation proposal, we look for, and are willing to accept, gradations between these poles. We believe - whether in light or not in light of recent history - that reasonable “win-win” solutions are available, if the parties meet and work through options. We ask that you confer carefully with your clients, and respond to our mediation proposal. We believe that mediation should commence as soon as possible. We have made this proposal to MIT counsel as well.
Let me know
leuan

Second, EFF says, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act’s prohibition on the “transmission of…information” that may damage a computer was never intended to encompass a public presentation and was not written to do so. Third, the restraining order is an unconstitutional prior restraint; if the Supreme Court permitted the publication of the Pentagon Papers in 1971 over the heated objections of the Nixon administration, why should a student presentation not also qualify?

We are concerned that the pall cast by the temporary restraining order will stifle research efforts and weaken academic computing research programs. In turn, we fear the shadow of the law’s ambiguities will reduce our ability to contribute to industrial research in security technologies at the heart of our information infrastructure. We urge that you reconsider and remove the temporary restraining order issued on August 10, 2008.

Dear leuan:

From: Mahony, leuan (BOS - X75835)
Sent: Monday, August 11, 2008 11:37 AM
To: ‘jennifer@eff.org’
Cc: ‘cindy@eff.org’; ‘kurt@eff.org’; ‘marcia@eff.org’; ‘WMitchell@mbta.com’; ‘SDarling@mbta.com’
Subject: Re: CRITICAL INFORMATION: MBTA v Anderson et al

In an e-mail message to EFF on Monday, Ieuan-Gael Mahony, a partner at the Holland & Knight law firm, wrote:

U.S. District Judge George O’Toole in Boston is scheduled to hear arguments at 11 a.m. ET on whether to modify or eliminate the temporary restraining order, which attorneys for the students characterize as a prior restraint in violation of decades of First Amendment precedent.

Thank you for your thoughts. I’m surprised your client feels that the Report does not pose a risk, given that it contains information my clients intended to keep confidential. It appears my clients are more cautious about disclosing vulnerability information than yours are. Moving forward, both the slides from our client’s intended presentation and the confidential Report are now publicly available. This constitutes more information than the students would have presented at their Defcon talk. Furthermore, your client reportedly does not feel that the security risk posed by the availability of this information warrants emergency measures. Finally, Defcon is over and the students did not give their talk. Under these circumstances, would your client be willing to stipulate to lifting the TRO at this time? While the protection it provides is now moot as to your client’s concerns, it continues to hang over our clients’ heads, making them uncertain what if anything they can say about their research and this case. Please let me know right away.

Security researchers are paying close attention to this case because it could eventually set a precedent weighing their First Amendment rights to publish freely–against the desires of vendors to keep embarrassing and potentially explosive details secret.

EFF has enlisted some high-profile academics to help it make the case that the restraining order is antithetical to security research. Carnegie Mellon University’s David Farber, Columbia’s Steven Bellovin, Berkeley’s David Wagner, and the University of Pennsylvania’s Matt Blaze are among the academics who signed a letter to the judge on Monday. It says:

In an effort to lessen the sting of free speech complaints, MBTA’s attorneys now are asking O’Toole to reword the order to apply only to “nonpublic” information, recognizing that the presentation slides are circulating online. But they insist the rest of the order must remain intact because the agency is greatly “concerned with the core issue of immediate concern in this case–the security and integrity of its Fare Media System.”

In a testy e-mail exchange with MBTA’s lawyer, EFF has suggested that he made a tactical error by filing both the presentation and the summary marked “confidential” as publicly available court exhibits. Read on for more details.

Jennifer:
The MBTA and one of its vendors have completed review per your email, below. I’ll have results to you later today.
I’ll continue to keep you informed.
Thanks
leuan

O’Toole has until August 19 to extend the order in the form of a preliminary injunction or let it expire.

In a mediation process, for example, we would hope to discuss and obtain an understanding of the information, if any, the MIT Undgrads hold that might threaten Fare Media System security. We do not set preconditions on a mediation, however, as we stongly believe — again - that discussions between reasonable parties toward a resolution are preferable to an externally imposed resolution… There are countless examples from large to small of relationships that are polarized and entrenched-hostile because of bad choices by both sides shortly after the rift began. We would like to avoid this here, if possible. We think talking in a non-binding, professionally mediated environment is the best way to avoid further misunderstanding, and potential “bad choices.” … You request, in an “on/off” manner, that we now “shut off’ the TRO. This is traditional advocacy, where the goal is to “win all” and avoid “lose all.” With our mediation proposal, we look for, and are willing to accept, gradations between these poles.

EFF appears to have rejected the request for a mediation. EFF attorney Marcia Hofmann refused to answer our questions, saying only that: “We decline to discuss our ongoing communications with counsel for the MBTA. Our priority at this point is to ensure that the temporary restraining order is lifted…”

From: Mahony, leuan (BOS - X75835)
Sent: Monday, August 11, 2008 3:36 PM
To: ‘jennifer@eff.org’
Cc: ‘cindy@eff.org’; ‘kurt@eff.org’; ‘marcia@eff.org’; JSwope@eadplaw.com; ‘WMitchell@mbta.com’; ‘SDarling@mbta.com’
Subject: RE: CRITICAL INFORMATION: MBTA v Anderson et al

The state of Massachusetts plans to ask a federal judge on Thursday to keep in place a restraining order that prevents three MIT students from publicly discussing vulnerabilities they discovered in subway card security.

EFF is offering three main arguments for its position: First, the Defcon conference is over and the presentation and separate analysis (PDF) have been widely circulated online (unfortunately for MBTA, a copy of the presentation was in the materials distributed to conference attendees).

Thank you,
Jennifer
Civil Liberties Director
Electronic Frontier Foundation
454 Shotwell Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415.436.9333 x 134
fax 415.436.9993
jennifer@eff.org

“The TRO as initially granted restricted the students from providing true, publicly known, legally acquired information about the MBTA’s CharlieCards and CharlieTickets in violation of the First Amendment,” the EFF said in a legal brief. “The current TRO as the MBTA suggests that it be modified still restricts the students from providing true, legally acquired information about these cards This restriction also violates the First Amendment.”

For its part, the MBTA says it’s willing to negotiate. It’s offered to engage in “non-binding” professional mediation, without “preconditions,” as an alternative to proceeding with Thursday’s hearing. (See our related story).

Aug 24

Related: Photophlow puts a fresh face on Flickr

DestroyFlickr is not without its quirks. For instance, the app requires you to manually refresh each page to see any changes, even after you upload new shots from it. Also, the refresh option is tucked away in a submenu and the same goes for any sort of back or undo button which I think will confuse novice users. Regardless, if you’re looking for a really fun and engaging way to view Flickr photos outside of your browser this is an excellent alternative to browser plug-ins like Piclens.

The small downloadable AIR (Adobe Integrated Runtime) application, which is a semifinalist in this year’s Adobe Design Achievement Awards, lets you plug into your Flickr account and view photos on a virtual canvas. Once it’s pulled in thumbnails, it doesn’t need to do it again (unlike Flickr’s own site). This means if you’re going through a bevy of photos (like in a contact’s photo stream) you’ll only have to grab that data once. Also, each task offered by the app is kept in a separate compartment, called a “workspace.” Once that’s been loaded it exists like an open browser tab, letting you zip back and forth between various tasks or albums.

In addition to its photo viewer is a drag-and-drop uploader for when it comes time to give something back. You can simply grab a shot or an entire album from your computer and drag it over. While it’s not as comprehensive as Flickr’s own uploader, it’ll get the job done quickly. I still think with Flickr’s recent improvements to its Web uploader, you’re better off using that if only for its post-upload editing tools.

The vast majority of Adobe AIR apps we’ve seen thus far have been heavy on the eye candy, so what’s a better service to give the treatment than Flickr? It’s a decidedly simplistic site with jaw-dropping photos uploaded by its users. Some might be looking for a little more though, which is where DestroyFlickr comes in.

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