
Ohio man charged with Anonymous-sponsored attacks on police websites

An Ohio man has been charged with hacking into two websites controlled by law enforcement groups after he posted Twitter messages boasting of the intrusions, which were carried out under the banner of "CabinCr3w," an offshoot of the Anonymous hacking collective.
John Anthony Borell III of Toledo, Ohio, was charged with two counts of computer intrusion, according to an indictment unsealed Monday in Federal Court in Utah. According to a separate criminal complaint that was also unsealed Monday, he exposed the names and private details of almost 500 police officers after using an automated script to carry out SQL injection attacks on websites belonging to the Utah Chiefs of Police and the Salt Lake City Police Department.

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Tupac 'hologram' merely pretty cool optical illusion
Hip-hop fans are dropping their collective jaws as word of the Tupac "hologram" is ricocheting around the Internet. As seen in the five-minute video, a three-dimensional Shakur is seen, shirtless, moving across the stage, and even greeting the crowd at the beginning with a stunning voice that sounds an awful lot like Tupac himself: "What the [f] is up, Coachella?"
The virtual rendition of the late rapper then proceeds to do renditions of two classic ‘Pac tracks, "Hail Mary" and "2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted," while gesturing and walking back and forth across the stage in an extremely lifelike manner, replete with Thug Life tattoos and his characteristic necklace. Twitter, unsurprisingly, has been abuzz with chatter—spawning an admittedly hilarious new account: @HologramTupac: "Anybody got a spare 54 AA sized batteries? I think Snoop done smoked my charger. #PlugLife"

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Feature: Ars Technica system guide: Bargain Box April 2012
Since the early 2000s, the Ars System Guides have been helping those interested become "budding, homebuilt system-building tweakmeisters." This series is a resource for building computers to match any combination of budget and purpose.
The Bargain Box (formerly the Ultimate Budget Box) is the most basic box we cover in the System Guides. As the lowest-price box in the guides, it lacks the sex appeal of its flashier siblings, and it has a host of competition today. Before it was just OEM pre-builts, then it was netbooks, now it's tablets.
Still, there seems to be a place for a basic desktop system. These live on in strength in the office, where the vast majority of employees read e-mail, crunch spreadsheets, and stream training videos. At home, boxes like this are a convenient place to stash all the pictures from the family vacation, and a nice place to hold media that won't fit on the (relatively) limited storage of the average tablet or cell phone. Tucked in the home office, or maybe even the core of a low-budget HTPC; many still have a legitimate need for a desktop.
There's no pretense of other needs in the Bargain Box. It gets a reasonable amount of storage despite its low cost, and there's no attempt at 3D ability outside of the basic level of performance found in the integrated graphics (IGP). It's there to do the basic tasks with minimum fuss.

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Microsoft talks Windows 8 SKUs: Windows 8, Windows 8 Pro, and "Windows RT" for ARM
Microsoft has announced the main Windows 8 product line-up. There will be two retail editions for Intel-compatible processors (both 32- and 64-bit), Windows 8 and Windows 8 Pro; a third edition for ARM processors, Windows RT; an enterprise edition, Windows 8 Enterprise, for volume license customers; and finally, some number of local-language-only versions for China and other selected emerging markets.
The blog post containing the announcement tabulates the major differences between the three main consumer editions—Windows 8, Windows 8 Pro, and Windows RT. Windows 8 is positioned as the replacement for Windows 7 Basic and Home Premium. Windows 8 Pro is viewed as the replacement for Windows 7 Professional and Ultimate. Windows RT will be exclusively available as a pre-install on ARM hardware, with no direct retail availability.
Windows 8 and Windows RT have broadly matching feature-sets. As previously announced, Windows RT adds Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote as built-in features and includes full-device encryption, which Windows 8 lacks. Conversely, Windows 8 includes support for existing x86 and x64 applications (naturally), Storage Spaces, and Windows Media Player.
Windows 8 Pro builds on Windows 8 to include support for BitLocker, domain membership, Hyper-V virtualization, Group Policy support, and certain other high-end features. No edition of Windows 8 will ship with Windows Media Center. It will, however, be available as an "economical" add-on to Windows 8 Pro.
Windows 8 Enterprise extends Windows 8 Pro to include various unspecified features to aid PC management, more complex security and virtualization scenarios, and "much more."
We've asked Microsoft how the feature-set of the emerging market editions will compare, but the company has no comment at this time; it's likely to serve as the replacement for Windows 7 Starter, and perhaps to a lesser extent Windows 7 Home Basic.
The new line-up is simpler than the Windows 7 line-up. While most consumers were never even offered the full range of Windows 7 options, the smaller set of SKUs should make purchasing simpler. One of the concerns often raised since the announcement of Windows on ARM processors is how Microsoft would inform consumers that this edition wouldn't support existing x86 and x64 software. The decision to brand the ARM edition as something other than Windows 8 appears to be Microsoft's answer to this conundrum. Whether "Windows RT" is sufficiently different from "Windows 8" in order to really set user expectations appropriately remains to be seen.
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Watchers, carers, and administrators: the smart homes of tomorrow
How smart should a smart home be before it's worthy of the name? To date, perhaps the term has been too readily applied to homes that are merely high-tech. Automated systems, remote control of appliances from mobile devices, TV and phone over IP—these are all welcome breakthroughs. These technologies are almost synonymous with the smart home and so-called intelligent buildings in general, but there's little or no intelligence to them. For a home to be considered smart, it must in a sense become a robot—a machine capable of, if not true intelligence (and certainly not sentience), sensing data, processing it, drawing conclusions of its own accord, and then acting upon those conclusions.
It's a distinction which Diane Cook of Washington State University's School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science is acutely aware of. Her research into smart homes goes well beyond presence-detecting light switches, IPTV, and automated garage doors. Cook is interested in homes that to all intents observe their residents and make decisions on their behalf for their own wellbeing. In some cases these decisions are simply for the purposes of convenience: one job less for the homeowner or their family. In other cases these may be decisions that, for a variety of possible reasons, the resident is incapable of making on their own. It's research that raises not only possibilities, but ethical questions and difficulties. Ars spoke to Cook about her work, and about the field of research more generally, to find out what sort of decisions our homes may be making for us in the not-too-distant future.

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Oracle tells jury "you can't just step on somebody's intellectual property"
SAN FRANCISCO—Google's Android operating system might be free, but it makes plenty of money off the system—and some of that cash ought to be headed to Oracle. At least that's what the database company's lawyer told a jury today. "You can't just step on somebody's intellectual property because you have a good business reason for it," said Michael Jacobs, an Oracle lawyer.
One of the biggest tech-industry legal disputes has moved to trial now in San Francisco, where a panel of 12 men and women was sworn in to hear eight weeks of testimony about whether Google violated copyright and patent laws when it created its Android operating system. Jacobs told jurors that Google was so eager to see Android take off, it was willing to charge ahead without getting a license from Sun—even though top Google execs knew it needed one. (Java was created by Sun Microsystems, which was purchased by Oracle a few years ago.)

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Feds shutter online narcotics store that used TOR to hide its tracks
Federal authorities have arrested eight men accused of distributing more than $1 million worth of LSD, ecstasy, and other narcotics with an online storefront that used the TOR anonymity service to mask their Internet addresses.
"The Farmer's Market," as the online store was called, was like an Amazon for consumers of controlled substances, according to a 66-page indictment unsealed on Monday. It offered online forums, Web-based order forms, customer service, and at least four methods of payment, including PayPal and Western Union. From January 2007 to October 2009, it processed some 5,256 orders valued at $1.04 million. The site catered to about 3,000 customers in 35 countries, including the United States.

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How a console firmware update could make a small dent in our energy problem
Environmental groups often push for efficiency improvements in big energy hogs like cars and appliances. It's viewed as a major way to reduce our collective energy use and carbon footprint. But a recent study argues a simple firmware update for current high definition video game consoles could provide a much easier way to chop off a small but significant portion of US residential energy usage.

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Proposed EU law would have hit Google with nearly $1 billion in fines
The FCC has cleared Google of any wrongdoing over the WiFi snooping case, but nonetheless hit it with a $25,000 fine for "noncompliance with [FCC] information and document requests." Google, for its part, has repeatedly said it has done nothing illegal, and that its previous practices were a "mistake," despite the fact the FCC found that the Google engineer involved in the project declined to testify.
"It seems that the FTC and other regulators around the world weren't able to assess the full scope of the problem without [this withheld information] and may have closed their investigations prematurely," Katitza Rodriguez, the international rights director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told Ars on Monday, adding that the technical information was "critical to a proper assessment of what [Google] did." Just to be clear, 25 large is pretty tiny to a company like Google. For a company worth almost $200 billion, this amount is so meaningless it’s basically laughable, particularly when the FCC has said it's now dropping this case.
Earlier this year, European Union Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding put forward a proposed revision of EU law that would radically update the 27-member bloc’s 1995-era data protection directive. Had this new proposal been in place prior to Google’s violation, it would have been required to notify data protection authorities as soon as possible—and face a fine of up to 2 percent of annual sales, which in Google’s case, could have reached €758 million ($990 million). Of course, these new proposed European regulations, if they do pass the European Parliament, will likely take a few years to become the law of the land.
To date, this appears to be the only fine from American authorities that Google has faced in relation to the WiFi snooping case. Across the pond in Europe, fines for judicial obstruction or privacy violations haven’t been much stiffer, either: CNIL, the French data protection authority, fined Google a maximum of €100,000 ($130,000). Their Dutch counterparts threatened to hit Google with a €1.4 million ($1.8 million) fine if it didn’t provide a way for Dutch users to opt out, which it did last April—and that case resulted in no fine at all. In 2010, Italian authorities threatened Google with an €1,800 fine ($2,352) if the company didn’t fulfill its new privacy restrictions. In some really privacy-conscious corners of Europe, like Germany, Google has pulled the plug on entire projects—abandoning collecting new Street View data as of last year.
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Delivery begins for first units of Raspberry Pi’s $35 Linux computer
The Raspberry Pi foundation has started shipping units of the much-anticipated $35 Linux computer. The organization has already started handing out the first units and conducting educational seminars with students.
The Raspberry Pi foundation was originally established with the goal of producing low-cost computers that students could use to learn computer programming. The project later attracted the interest of Linux users and embedded computing enthusiasts. The launch product is a bare board that is roughly the size of a deck of playing cards with a 700MHz ARM11 CPU and 256MB of RAM.
Faced with overwhelming demand for the product prior to the launch, the Raspberry Pi foundation decided earlier this year to transition to a licensed manufacturing model. They partnered with Premier Farnell and RS Components, hardware makers that are going to serve as retailers for the first batch of units and then take over manufacturing for all subsequent production.
Manufacturing on the first batch started in January, but completion was delayed due to an issue with one of the components. The first boards arrived in the UK at the end of March, but couldn’t be delivered right away due to compliance issues. The foundation finally announced on April 14 that deliveries have officially begun. A video that was published recently on the Raspberry Pi website shows founder Eben Upton hand-delivering a set of the $35 boards to RS Components. Consumers who ordered the board from RS and Farnell will reportedly receive updated delivery estimates soon.
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US Supreme Court to revisit "first-sale" copyright doctrine

The Supreme Court agreed Monday to decide the global reach of US copyright law, in a case testing whether an overseas purchaser of a copyrighted work may resell it in the United States without the copyright holder’s permission.
The justices will hear the case, which considers the “first-sale” doctrine, in its next term and is expected to set a nationwide standard. Federal circuit courts of appeal are split on the issue.
The first-sale doctrine generally allows the purchaser of any copyrighted work to re-sell or use the work in many ways without the copyright holder’s permission. That’s why used bookstores, libraries, GameStop, video rental stores, and even eBay are all legal. But how the doctrine applies to foreign-purchased works—the so-called grey market—has been a matter of considerable debate.
In many ways, this is a battle for non-digital goods. Most digital goods, like software, e-books and MP3s—because of licensing or sandboxing—cannot be resold. However, a US startup, ReDigi, is testing that theory when it comes to online music.
Meanwhile, the high court in 2010 said the first-sale doctrine did not apply to overseas purchases of copyrighted works which were imported for resale in the United States. The 4-4 ruling meant Costco could be liable for copyright infringement for selling foreign-made watches without the manufacturer’s authorization. However, because there was no majority decision, the ruling did not set a nationwide precedent and solely affirmed a lower court’s ruling.
Justice Elena Kagan was recused from the Costco case, as she had worked on it when she was solicitor general. She had urged the justices to side with Omega, the watchmaker. The government’s position was that the “Copyright Act does not apply outside the United States.” Costco had told the Supreme Court that the decision effectively urges US-based manufacturers to flee the United States (.pdf) to acquire complete control over distribution of their goods in the American market, arguments now being made in the latest case.
The case the justices decided to review Monday concerns textbook maker John Wiley & Sons and California entrepreneur Supap Kirtsaeng, who was reselling textbooks purchased overseas to US-based students without the publisher’s consent. The publisher sued, and a New York federal jury agreed with John Wiley & Sons’ position that the first-sale doctrine did not apply, and awarded $600,000 in damages for copyright infringement.
A federal appeals court upheld the judgement. (.pdf)
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Researchers uncover new espionage malware preying on Mac users

Researchers have discovered at least two new pieces of malware in the wild that subject Mac users to advanced surveillance campaigns designed to surreptitiously siphon confidential data from their machines.
According to blog posts from Kaspersky and Sophos, malware identified as SabPub arrives in a booby-trapped Microsoft Word document that exploits a critical vulnerability that was patched three years ago. The APT, or advanced persistent threat, appears to have similarities to an espionage campaign that Ars reported last month, which targets employees of several pro-Tibetan non-governmental organizations. Kaspersky Lab Expert Costin Raiu said two new strains of SabPub are noteworthy because of their ability to stay hidden until now.

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Nokia debt downgraded as company struggles
On Monday, Moody's Investors Service downgraded
Nokia's corporate debt to near-junk status. The company's decline in sales
numbers and 35 percent fall in revenue have earned it a Baa3 rating, or one
step away from non-investment grade. This latest drop marks the most recent
stumbling block for a company that was once the pinnacle of Finnish innovation
and pioneered the global rise in mobile phones.
Nokia's financial reputation has been on the
decline for some time, with its unit
shipments dropping from 26.5 million in Q3 2010 to just 16.8 million in Q3
2011, capturing 14.4 percent of the global smartphone market. Forbes points
out that Nokia is being edged out of the low-end handset market in
countries like Africa, India and China by companies like ZTE and Micromax,
which is negatively affecting its shipment figures.
The company is in the middle of recasting itself as
a mid-range to high-end smartphone source with its Lumia line of Windows Phone
handsets. This includes AT&T's Lumia
900, which launched with a data
connectivity glitch that Nokia quickly owned up to and fixed. However,
given that the high end of the market has been plenty saturated with RIM, Apple, and Android devices—the company's strategy remains quite a gamble.
But the low- to high-end transition is happening
too slowly for Moody's tastes: "Nokia's transition in its Smart Devices
from Symbian-based phones to the Windows-based Lumia devices is proving more
challenging than expected given that sales of Symbian-based devices are falling
off very quickly while Lumia sales are only ramping up slowly," the agency
said in its report.
Nokia responded
that its investment rating is backed by its "strong liquidity position and
capital structure," with a gross cash balance of €9.8 billion ($12.8
billion). "Nokia will continue to increase its focus on lowering the
company's cost structure, improving cash flow and maintaining a strong
financial position," said Timo Ihamuotila, Nokia's executive vice
president and CFO, in a statement.
AT&T, Nokia's partner in relaunching the brand
in the US, did not respond immediately to requests for comment. Nokia is set to
announce its first-quarter results for 2012 on April 19.
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Physicist uses math to avoid traffic penalty


A physicist faced with a fine for running a stop sign has
proved his innocence by publishing a mathematical paper, and
has even won a prize for his efforts.

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Leaked Office 15 video hints at SkyDrive, 365 integration
Following a leaked roadmap of Microsoft's upcoming Office 15 productivity suite last week, a new video has been posted hinting at SkyDrive and Office 365 integration as well.
Shared by Rafael Rivera of Within Windows earlier today, the video depicts a typical morning commute by car or train, where files stored in Microsoft cloud can be accessed "wherever you go ... so it's easy to pick up where you left off." Though this functionality currently exists in Office 2010, it's likely Microsoft is looking to put its cloud services front and center with the latest release. For tablet deployments of Windows 8, this could be the company's answer to Apple's iCloud/iWork document sync.
Office 15 is rumored for release in 2013, with a public beta coming this summer.
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Diamond-based LED sends single photons flying

Why might you want to produce a single photon? Individual photons would be very useful for the development of quantum control, computing, and communication. Unfortunately, making one photon at a time in a controlled manner generally requires specialized nanomaterials and very cold temperatures. However, a group of researchers has achieved single-photon emission at room temperature using a modified diamond semiconductor device.
Diamonds composed of pure carbon are insulators, but introducing impurities—a process known as doping—can allow diamond to conduct electricity. N. Mizuochi et al. combined three different types of doped diamonds into a diode, including one with a nitrogen atom in place of one of the carbon atoms and a gap where a second carbon ordinarily would sit. The doping altered the electronic structure of the diamond so that single photons are produced under the influence of an electric current. While the physical mechanism for producing light appears to be much like a light-emitting diode (LED), the details of the electronic structure and the generation of single photons mark the diamond material as truly novel.

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Valve teases "wearable computing" research with augmented reality overlay

Following on recent rumors pointing to Valve's interest in entering the hardware market in some way, Valve developer Michael Abrash wrote in a blog post on Valve's official site about his research on a project "where both computer-generated graphics and the real world are seamlessly overlaid in your view."
Abrash, a game programming and graphics veteran whose work includes the original Doom and Quake, outlined a concept similar to Google's recently unveiled Project Glass, where there is "no separate display that you hold in your hands." He likened the effect to the "Terminator vision" from the movie of the same name, and noted that it could be achieved with glasses, contacts or "for all I know through some kind of more direct neural connection."
While Abrash was quick to point out that his research "doesn't in any way involve a product at this point, and won't for a long while, if ever," he was effusive about the potential of wearable computing as the logical next step in computing's progression from desktop to laptop to tablets and mobile devices. And he thinks such wearable, eye-mounted devices could become a new standard in a relatively short time frame.
"I'm pretty confident that platform shift will happen a lot sooner than 20 years—almost certainly within 10, but quite likely as little as three to five, because the key areas—input, processing/power/size, and output—that need to evolve to enable wearable computing are shaping up nicely, although there’s a lot still to be figured out," he wrote. Those things to "figure out" include important questions involving user interface and the practicality of augmented reality, he added.
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Sprint's Galaxy Nexus is $100 cheaper, will support Google Wallet

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus will be coming to Sprint's network on April 22, Sprint announced today. The phone will be able to take advantage of Sprint's nascent 4G LTE network, and unlike the Verizon version of the phone, Sprint's Galaxy Nexus will fully support Google Wallet.
Verizon was the first network to carry the flagship Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich phone, but it has fought Google behind the scenes over whether the phone would be able to use its NFC technology for Google Wallet. Ultimately, Verizon declared it wouldn't support the feature, crippling the Galaxy Nexus' ability to be a paragon of Google's mobile virtues. Sprint is the only network to support Google Wallet in the U.S.
4G LTE coverage for Sprint has only been announced for a handful of cities so far, and the company plans to complete its expansion by the end of 2013.
The Galaxy Nexus will be priced at $199.99 with a two-year contract, $100 less than on Verizon. Preorders for the phone open today, and the phone will officially arrive on Sprint April 22.
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FCC drops Google investigation over WiFi snooping, issues small fine
The FCC has dropped its investigation of Google's collection of WiFi "payload data" as part of the company's Street View project, but has slapped the company with a $25,000 fine for obstructing its investigation. The investigation sought to determine if Google had improperly collected and stored personal information from traffic over unsecured personal WiFi networks, including e-mail, text messages, and webpage requests. An investigation by the Federal Trade Commission was dropped in October of 2010, just as the FCC took up its own.
In a notice dated April 13, released in a partially redacted form (PDF) on April 15 by the FCC, the commission claimed, "For many months, Google deliberately impeded the (FCC Enforcement) Bureau's investigation by failing to respond to requests for material information and to provide certifications and verifications of its responses." In the notice, the FCC added that it had no further plans for enforcement action on the matter—in part because the Google engineer who developed the code used to collect and store WiFi data "invoked his Fifth Amendment rights and declined to testify."
The FCC also said that it determined, lacking further information on the nature of the collection, that there was no precedent for applying the laws under which the investigation was launched—the Wiretap Act and the Communications Act—because the traffic intercepted by Google was not encrypted.
The New York Times reports that on Sunday, a Google spokesperson called the data collection "a mistake...but we believe we did nothing illegal."
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Microsoft job ads reveal HTML5 version of Skype coming to Web browsers
Microsoft is working on a new version of Skype to run in Web browsers, and is hiring developers to build it. At least four job ads describe a "Skype for Browsers" project and show that Microsoft is looking for software engineers in London and Prague with "real world experience developing HTML5 UI’s including rich interaction based on JavaScript."
Skype is already integrated with Facebook, with an app including instant messages, voice, and video calls. But Skype for Browsers won't be restricted to Facebook.
"Team Rendezvous at Skype is looking for passionate, team-oriented and self-motivated Developers to help us bring Skype experience on to the Web," Microsoft writes in the job postings. "You will have a chance to integrate existing Skype solutions on to the web with the support of the backend services built from the ground up using [the] latest Microsoft technologies. [The] result of your work will be used by hundreds millions of thankful users worldwide."
Microsoft closed its $8.5 billion acquisition of Skype in October 2011. After the merger, Microsoft finally brought a Skype client to Windows Phone. In addition to building a new Skype client to Web browsers, we've written that Microsoft is likely to integrate the technology into many of its core desktop products.
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This planet obeys the law—stats on volcanic eruptions show pattern called Benford's Law
Scientists delight in extracting order from chaos—finding patterns in the complexity of the real world that pull back the curtain and reveal how things work. Sometimes, though, those patterns create more head-scratching than excitement. Such is the case with Benford’s law. One might expect a collection of real-world data—say, the half-lives of various isotopes, for example—to pretty much look like random numbers. And one might further expect the first (non-zero) digit of each of those numbers to also be random (i.e. just as many 2s as 9s).
Oddly, one would (in many cases) be wrong. It turns out that 1s are more likely than 2s, which are more likely than 3s, and so on. Not only that, the probabilities match a logarithmic distribution, just like the spacing on a logarithmic scale. The number 1 will be the first digit about 30 percent of the time, 2 will occur nearly 18 percent of the time, all the way on down to 9 showing up only about 5 percent of the time.
Law-abiding citizens everywhere will be happy to know our planet also obeys Benford's Law, with the duration and size of volcanic eruptions showing the same sort of pattern.

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iPad 3 rollout continues, hits 21 additional countries this month
Apple is continuing to widen the availability of its third-generation iPad throughout the month of April. The company announced on Monday that it will make the device officially available in 20 new territories by the end of the month.
On Friday, April 20, iPads will go on sale in Brunei, Croatia, Cyprus, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Malaysia, Panama, St Maarten, South Korea, Uruguay, and Venezuela. And the following Friday, April 27, iPads will be available in nine more countries: Colombia, Estonia, India, Israel, Latvia, Lithuania, Montenegro, South Africa, and Thailand. By the end of the month, the iPad 3 will be on sale in 57 countries around the globe.
The iPad 3 rollout has been the most aggressive of nearly all iOS devices. Apple sold a record 3 million iPad 3s during its launch weekend, and is expected to have sold as many as 13 million iPads during its most recent fiscal quarter, which ended in March. The additional rollouts announced today should help Apple maintain a healthy sales volume for the current quarter as well.
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Available Tags:Ars , Technica , Windows 8 , Microsoft , Windows , Windows , Windows , Oracle , Google , Linux , Mac , Nokia , Valve , Galaxy , HTML5 , Skype , iPad 3 , iPad ,

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