
Google Reader is pushing out a new feature called Play to some of its users. If that link brings up a 404 error, bad news, you don’t have access yet. You can read the official Google announcement here.
The new Google Reader area found at http://google.com/reader/play is designed to give feeds rich in visuals a place to be browsed. This will only move to cement Reader as the best, and most popular RSS reader in the world.
The market reaction the product is very, very positive. If…
Filed under: E-mail, Google, Mozilla, Freeware, Social Software, Browsers
There are a number of email plugins that look to give you contextual information about the person you’re communicating with. The first one I tried (and arguably the best I’ve seen) is Xobni, an Outlook plugin.
There’s now a similar plugin available for Gmail users called Rapportive. Rapportive replaces the ads you normally see in the right-hand sidebar with a profile of the person you’re…
Wireless telecoms giant Vodafone has been distributing malware to it’s customers via it’s mobile phones, a recent blog post from the Panda Research Team shows.
A member of the research team had a brand new Vodafone HTC Magic delivered, a device powered by the open-source Android mobile operating system.
Upon connecting it to her computer, the employee received a warning from her Panda Cloud Antivirus warning her about a potential threat from files already on the…
One Program, Two Platforms!
Did you know that with Small Basic v0.8, you can write a program or a game and have it run identically on both your desktop and the browser? This makes it super easy to share your games with your friends (even those that may be running a Mac).
In fact it is so easy that you can have your program deployed, hosted and running on a browser with just one click of a button! So easy that it might actually be the fastest and friction free authoring environment for…
“This happens. This is something that happens.”

Australian town, 326 miles from river, hit by raining fish:
Lajamanu in the Northern Territory, population 669, has seen hundreds of small white fish fall from rain clouds with many still alive.
Weather experts in Australia believe the fish, spangled perch, were sucked up in a thunderstorm before being dumped over the tiny town.
Mark Kersemakers, the senior forecaster at the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, said: “It could have…








