
Google maps for NES surpasses other attempts at April foolery
Sure, it's a little early to call winners, but not many tech companies will be able to top Google's genuinely clever, fun, and novel approach to April Fools Day 2012. Any other gag will seem a little half-hearted after Google's 8-bit maps view, which reminds the nostalgic of games like early Dragon Quest or Final Fantasy.
The Google Maps team put up an introductory post for the new view this morning, explaining "we realized that we may have left behind a large number of users who couldn't access Google Maps on their classic hardware. Surprisingly, the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) was unsupported, despite its tremendous popularity with over 60 million units sold worldwide." In the accompanying video, Google's engineering team explains how it adapted the NES' outdated hardware to connect to Google's servers. "Blow on the cartridge to fix bugs," Tatsuo Nomura, software engineer, deadpans.

Connect your NES to Google maps!
For those without a working NES handy, you can sample the pixelated user interface by going to google maps and clicking on the box in the top right corner labeled “quest”.Features like directions, zoom levels and even street view still work more or less like normal, though smaller streets don't show up thanks to the size of the old-school pixel tiles.

Paris, France in Google maps for NES
You could easily waste your entire day searching the map for hand-drawn, pixel art versions of many famous landmarks (and even some not-so-famous ones), but if you want to save some time blogger Ben Garvey has created a pretty thorough cheat sheet of notable places. Google says there are even some fictional monsters hidden within the Quest view—Senior Games Editor Kyle Orland found one here if you don't mind spoiling the hunt.
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This old backup: how to dispose of your old archives without exposing yourself

March 31 is World Backup Day, the day that the storage tech industry exhorts us all to back up our digital possessions and practice good data hygiene. But there's one thing that's just as important as backing up your data in the first place, or possibly more so: properly getting rid of your old backups when they're no longer useful. So while you're using today as an excuse to get your friends and family to get their critical files backed up, it's worth taking a hard look at how to make sure that old backups get retired in a way that doesn't result in someone getting hold of your grandmother's tax return.
Backups, like anything in a can, have a limited shelf life. Just as you should destroy those old bank statements, pay stubs and other pieces of paper that have your personal data on them, old data needs to be shredded too—virtually or physically. Just like you'd never give your tax returns to your kid's school for origami projects, you shouldn't just pass on that old 200 GB external drive to your cousin—or sell it on Craigslist—without taking some precautions first.
There are plenty of cautionary tales of disk reuse gone wrong. In 2009, researchers surveying used hard disks found sensitive data on an antiballistic missile system and the Lockheed-Martin facility where it was being developed on a hard drive purchased on eBay. And last year, a survey of drives being prepared to be sold at auction by the State of New Jersey found court records and other sensitive data still lingered on the drives.

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Weekend Ar(t)s: resources to retroactively celebrate World Whisky Day
During the weekend, even Ars takes an occasional break from revisiting the history of Sealand or discovering crazy game jams inspired by Twitter accounts. Weekend Ar(t)s is a chance to share what we're watching/listening/reading or otherwise consuming this week.
The key word for Weekend Ar(t)s this week is consuming.

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Facebook timeline rolls out to all brand pages
Facebook pushed its Timeline profile to all brand pages on Friday, a major aesthetic revamp to the face of businesses representing themselves on Facebook.
Introduced in September, the Timeline feature is a running list of your interactions with Facebook. Status updates, photos and app posts are displayed in reverse chronological order below a large cover photo. The feature was created during one of Facebook’s hackathon sessions and was originally dubbed ‘Memories.’ Until today, activating Timeline on brand pages was voluntary.

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Ask Stack: How can I find a good open source project to join?

This Q&A is part of a biweekly series of posts highlighting common questions encountered by technophiles and answered by users at Stack Exchange, a free, community-powered network of 80+ Q&A sites.
Lord Torgamus asks: I want to join an open source project for the same reasons as anyone else: I want to help create something useful and become a better coder.
My problem is, I don't know how to find a project where I'll fit in.
How can I find a beginner-friendly project? What attributes should I be searching for? What are warning signs that a project might not be the right fit? Are there any tools out there to help match me with an open source project?

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Week in Apple: iPad styli, iPhone security, UDIDs, and more
As everyone continues to recover from new iPad overdoses, our top Apple coverage from the week was mostly populated by non-iPad news. We did take a look at the state of styli on the iPad, but we also examined how iPhones leak the IDs of wireless routers they've connected to, whether Ars readers still use Siri, the likelihood of new MacBooks in the near future, and more. Read on for the roundup!
The current state of styli and the iPad: does the stylus still blow it?: While Apple has all but ignored stylus input, the new iPad may be the best device yet short of a legal pad for taking notes by hand.
Anatomy of a leak: how iPhones spill the ID of networks they access: Yes, iPhones and other Apple devices routinely do expose the unique identifiers of wireless routers they've connected to in the past. The behavior, which isn't found in devices running Windows and Android OSes, is found in ARP packets that are easily monitored by anyone within radio range.

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Week in Gaming: Used game blocking and World of Warcraft pandas
This week saw rumors of yet another console maker that might be planning to implement a technical solution to the used game "problem" for its next system, prompting a controversial editorial where I suggest such a move wouldn't be the end of the world for the video game market from an economic perspective. We also took a look at the beta for World of Warcraft's upcoming Mists of Pandaria expansion, and examined how important relatively limited hardware power might be to the success of the Wii U.
Next week at this time I'll be prowling the halls and panels of Boston's PAX East, including quite a few panels that I'll actually be speaking on. If you walk up to me and say the secret phrase "Super Mario 64 is the greatest game of all time" you'll win a super-fantastic prize (Warning: super-fantastic prize may in fact be a business card).

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Week in tech: the life and death of HavenCo, TSA critics apply elsewhere

Death of a data haven: cypherpunks, WikiLeaks, and the world's smallest nation: Rumors suggest that WikiLeaks might try to avoid government power by putting its servers out to sea, but the idea isn't a new one—it already failed miserably a decade ago. Ars takes you inside the collapse of HavenCo.

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Week in science avoids the lightning, gets hit by a neutron
Lightning strikes shift a spectacular amount of electricity around, but we've really only fully appreciated their power in recent years, as we've discovered that they also produce antimatter and—as described this week—free neutrons. As if that isn't enough to make the Earth seem like a scary place, this week featured stories on what basic demographics will leave the planet looking like at mid-century, as well as spectacularly misguided legislation that may interfere with science education in the US.

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Megaupload user asks for his perfectly legal videos back
The Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a brief on behalf of an Ohio man in a federal court case brought by the United States against Kim Dotcom, founder and owner of the file-sharing locker Megaupload. The brief requested that Kyle Goodwin, and users like him, be allowed access to the files they had stored on the currently shuttered site.
Goodwin is a local high school sports reporter and the sole proprietor of the company OhioSportsNet, who stored his video footage on Megaupload.com as a backup to his video library on his hard drive. He had paid €79.99 (about $107) for a two-year premium membership. Just days before the government seized the site, Goodwin's hard drive crashed. The brief states that his lost videos include footage to make highlight reels for parents to send to their children's prospective colleges, and an unfinished full-length documentary about the Strongsville girls soccer team’s season.

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Windows 8 Start button isn't coming back, but there will be a tutorial
The Start button won't be coming back, no matter how much detractors of Windows 8's new user interface would like it to. But to make the new operating system easier to understand for mouse and keyboard users, it will contain a tutorial to explain how things work.
Investment firm Nomura has hosted a series of meetings with Tami Reller, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Marketing Officer of the Windows and Windows Live division, to talk about what's coming up for Microsoft's next operating system.
In these meetings, Reller discussed the concerns that reviewers have raised about the Windows 8 interface: in particular, the lack of familiarity that the interface will have, and the worry that it will be confusing for mouse users. Windows 8 removes the Start button and instead depends on hot corners for essential functionality, and in the current beta there is little to tell users what to do.
According to Nomura, Reller confirmed that the Start button will remain gone, but that the discoverability problem will be addressed through a tutorial for users, so that when they first run the operating system they will be guided through the new interactions.
A tutorial won't solve every concern that people have about the new interface—for example, the very different look-and-feel between the desktop and Metro—but it could go a long way towards ensuring that new users don't get stuck.
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A rising tide lifts all boats: Explosive Kickstarter growth helps all
Nearly 90,000 backers pledged over $3.3 million dollars on Kickstarter to make video game developer Double Fine’s new adventure game project a reality. But Double Fine's immense success worried some projects that they would suffer from reduced contributions as a result.
Not so, says Kickstarter. In fact, in a post on Kickstarter’s blog, the company estimates that Double Fine Adventure brought more than 60,000 first-time backers to the site and nearly a quarter of those users have gone on to support other projects since. While most of those additional dollars went to other games-related pledges, the company estimates that about $250,000 had also been pledged to non-game projects.

Here, we see the average number of video game pledges on Kickstarter skyrocketed following the launch of Double Fine Adventure, as indicated by the dotted line.
Or consider yet another Kickstarter success story, webcomic Order of the Stick, which raised just over $1.25 million dollars to reprint older, out-of-print editions of the comic’s earlier books. Metrics indicate that the number of comics-related pledges doubled after the webcomic’s campaign launched. Similarly, Kickstarter estimates that nearly a quarter of backers whose first pledge was to Order of the Stick have since backed at least one other project.
Contrary to what some might think, “projects aren't fighting over a finite pool of Kickstarter dollars or backers" reads the post. "One project's backer isn't another project's loss.” Combined, new users contributed over $1 million to additional projects.
The takeaway, says the company, is that ”these projects illustrate how the Kickstarter ecosystem is strengthened with each new project and backer”—to the extent that some first-time Double Fine and Order of the Stick supporters even pledged money to projects in the "dance" category.
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Ukrainian police shut down forum for malware writers
Ukrainian authorities have shut down a website for creators of viruses and other types of malware, in an effort to shut some of the windows to cybercrime available in the country. The forum, called VX Heavens, let creators of malicious software exchange tips and tricks, and offered tutorials and samples of malicious code for its readers.
VX Heavens posted a note regarding the takedown, saying that despite its many years of operation and "professional quality information on systems security and computer virology," it could not continue to operate until the authorities close the case. Several sources including Naked Security and The Register say the site primarily catered to old-school hackers and had little to do with the kind of high-stakes financial fraud that Ukrainian authorities have yet to fully tackle. Still, the site supported people who worked on various types of malware (VX is shorthand for "Virus eXchange"), and Ukrainian criminal code forbids creating "malicious programs with an intent to sell or spread them."
Cybersecurity experts and government entities have long seen Ukraine as a locus for Internet crime, and recent moves by authorities might show that the country is attempting to rectify that reputation. In 2009, the FBI stationed a temporary supervisory special agent to help the government deal with cybercrimes that have cost millions of dollars in damages, not least to US financial companies.
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Reports identify Chinese grad student in hacks against Tibetans, others
Antivirus provider Trend Micro has released a research paper that links breaches against the computers of Tibetan activists and companies in Japan and India to a hacker in the Chinese underground.
An article published on Thursday in the New York Times later identified the intruder as a Chinese former graduate student who now "apparently" works for Tencent, China’s leading Internet portal company, according to online records cited by the news organization. It was one of the few times people investigating espionage-style malware attacks have put a public face on an alleged perpetrator.

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Denmark's 50 percent wind commitment and a path to fully renewable power
Denmark has committed to generating 50 percent of its electricity from wind sources by the year 2020, by which time the country hopes to have reduced CO2 emissions by 34 percent compared to 1990 levels. This renewed commitment to wind forms the central pillar in an energy bill that commits to obtaining 35 percent of the country's energy from renewable sources by that time. And Denmark actively aims to lower energy consumption, with 2020 usage 12 percent lower than that of 2006.
"Denmark will once again be the global leader in the transition to green energy," said Martin Lidegaard, Denmark's Minister for Climate, Energy and Building. "This will prepare us for a future with increasing prices for oil and coal. Moreover, it will create some of the jobs that we need so desperately, now and in the coming years."
The bill passed with a near-unanimous 171 votes out of the parliament's 179 seats.

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More funding will bring Obsidian Entertainment on board for Wasteland sequel development
As if fans of old-school PC RPGs didn't have enough reason to be excited about the successfully Kickstarted sequel to Wasteland, there's now word that Planescape: Torment studio Obsidian Entertainment will join in on the development of the game if the project reaches a new goal of $2.1 million in funding.
According to a statement released by developer inXile, Wasteland mastermind Brian Fargo reached out to Obsidian Chief Creative Officer Chris Avellone, who says he "jumped at the chance" to work on what he considers a spiritual successor to the Fallout series. Fargo previously worked with members of the Obsidian team at Interplay's Black Isle Studios, on titles like Icewind Dale and the first two Fallout games.
Besides reuniting these talented developers, Fargo said adding Obsidian to the project would bring "an incredible library of story, dialog and design tools that they have used to create hits like Neverwinter Nights 2, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II, and of course, Fallout: New Vegas. Regardless of the tech we use to develop the game, experience with these tools will help us efficiently design the game without wasting time and resources on the tools needed for development."
The Kickstarter fundraising effort for Wasteland 2 flew past its initial $900,000 funding goal just two days after its launch earlier this month, and has since passed the $1.5 million that was deemed necessary to add a Mac/Linux version on top of the PC edition. Backers now have 17 days to raise the nearly $450,000 necessary to reach the new, Obsidian-attracting level of $2.1 million. That's money the studio could surely use, after reportedly letting go of 20 to 30 employees earlier this month.
InXile is now also taking PayPal pledges directly through its website, and is still offering funding rewards ranging from a downloadable soundtrack to an autographed collector's edition of the boxed game. Five percent of all profits from the funding will be reinvested in other projects through the Kicking It Forward initiative.
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"Major" credit-card breach hits Visa, MasterCard (Updated)
Visa and MasterCard are alerting their card-issuer banks of a major breach of a US-based payments processor, according to published reports. KrebsonSecurity.com, citing unnamed sources, says as many as 10 million cards may be affected, while The Wall Street Journal, also citing unnamed people, identifies the compromised processor as Global Payments Inc.
Both reports cite a written notice Visa is sending to banks warning of a network intrusion that may have lasted from January 21 to February 25. According to KrebsonSecurity, full Track 1 and Track 2 data was lifted, meaning the hackers would have everything they need to clone counterfeit cards. A forensic company and the US Secret Service are conducting an investigation, which is still in the early stages, the document cited in the news reports said.
After the reports were published, Global Payments released a statement that confirmed it had "identified and self-reported unauthorized access into a portion of its processing system." It continued:
"In early March 2012, the company determined card data may have been accessed. It immediately engaged external experts in information technology forensics and contacted federal law enforcement. The company promptly notified appropriate industry parties to allow them to minimize potential cardholder impact. The company is continuing its investigation into this matter."
Global Payments says on its website that it processes "billions and billions of transactions per year for over a million points of service across North America." The Atlanta-based company has scheduled a conference call for Monday morning to discuss the breach
Visa, meanwhile, issued its own statement that said in part: "Visa Inc. is aware of a potential data compromise incident at a third party entity affecting card account information from all major card brands. There has been no breach of Visa systems, including its core processing network VisaNet." MasterCard said its employees are "investigating a potential account data compromise event of a U.S.-based
entity and, as a result, we have alerted payment card issuers regarding
certain MasterCard accounts that are potentially at risk."
The reports evoke memories of the compromise several years ago of Heartland Payment Systems, which at the time processed card transactions for more than 250,000 businesses. Serial hacker Albert Gonzalez was ultimately indicted for the intrusion, which prosecutors said was in part accomplished by exploiting a garden-variety bug on Heartland's website. Gonzalez ultimately pleaded guilty to hacking Heartland and other companies and making off with data for more than 130 million cards.
Heartland set aside more than $12.6 million to clean up after the hacking spree. Stock trades for Global Payments were halted following the news after the share price fell more than 9 percent.
The reports don't elaborate on the number of cards actually compromised. They cite a separate notice by PSCU, a company that works with credit unions, that identified as many as 56,000 accounts that may be at risk. Avivah Litan, an analyst for Gartner who follows the credit card industry, has issued a report that says her sources "are seeing signs of this breach mushroom."
Updated to add statements from Global Payments, Visa, and MasterCard.
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Compared to other groups, conservatives have least confidence in science

In the US, science has become a bit of a political punching bag, with a number of presidential candidates accusing climatologists of fraud, even as state legislators seek to inject phony controversies into science classrooms. It's enough to make one long for the good old days when science was universally respected. But did those days ever actually exist?
A new look at decades of survey data suggests that there was never a time when science was universally respected, but one political group in particular—conservative voters—has seen its confidence in science decline dramatically over the last 30 years.

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RIM CEO announces purges, wants to recapture love of enterprise IT
Ten weeks into his tenure as Research in Motion CEO, Thorsten Heins is now readying the axe. “It’s now very clear to me that substantial change is what RIM needs,” Heins said in a conference call and webcast with investors late on March 29. As a result, he says has begun a massive restructuring of the smartphone and mobile device maker.
Part of that change includes cleaning house—a group of executives, including former co-CEO Jim Balsillie, have resigned or retired as the company prepared its financial results. (RIM took a loss of $125 million for its fourth quarter, which just ended—compared to a $934 million profit a year ago.) More may soon be swept out as Heins makes changes, and seeks to sell off or shut down parts of the business that don't mesh with his vision of a newer, leaner RIM. “We see that Blackberry can not succeed if we try to be everybody's darling and all things to all people,” Heins said.

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"Pirate" Windows virtual desktop service accepting beta signups
We recently told you about Guise Bule, a software executive who is daring Microsoft to sue him by launching a virtual desktop service that clearly violates Microsoft's Windows licensing rules.
The service—Desktops On Demand—hasn't gone live yet, but its website has just launched, and those who are interested can sign up for the beta service which is scheduled to be available 32 days from now. Bule, the CEO of virtual desktop vendor tuCloud, says the service will be real. But its main purpose is to serve as a protest of what Bule believes is Microsoft's unfair enforcement of Windows licensing policies.
Controversy in the virtual desktop industry erupted when OnLive started offering a virtual desktop service for the iPad and other devices. The service is free or $5 a month for an upgraded version, prices that are essentially impossible to offer without either violating Microsoft's license rules or taking a loss. Microsoft confirmed that OnLive is violating license rules, but Bule and others are mad Microsoft has allowed OnLive to continue offering the service until a legitimate licensing arrangement is worked out.
Bule came up with Desktops On Demand, a service that would similarly violate Windows licensing rules in order to provide cheap desktops on iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, or Linux. Bule called it his "pirate platform." While one might expect Microsoft to take legal action against the service when it launches for real, Bule said he's surprised he hasn't yet heard from Microsoft on the matter. "You would have thought they would reach out to me in some way, but no," he told Ars.
So far, Microsoft has declined to comment publicly on Bule's Desktops On Demand service.
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New Siri lawsuit also accuses Apple of over-promising functionality
A second lawsuit over Apple's "virtual personal assistant" Siri has been filed in as many weeks. The new lawsuit, filed earlier this week in a Los Angeles District Court, mirrors one filed earlier this month in New York that claimed Apple over-sells Siri's abilities in its advertising.
"Apple's deceptive commercials diverge greatly from the actual functionality and operation of the Siri feature as experienced by Plaintiff and fellow consumers," reads a copy of the complaint seen by the Los Angeles Times. "Siri would either not understand what Plaintiff asked, or, after a long wait, provided the wrong answer."
The claims in this week's suit are similar to those from the lawsuit filed on March 12. Both assert that Apple's commercials and marketing campaigns imply that Siri is much more intelligent than it is, but that the assistant rarely understands what the users are actually asking for. Both suits seek class status in their respective states. (Incidentally, the New York suit cites an Ars article from 2011 examining Siri's data usage habits, but draws a different conclusion from the article than most readers. While many of you felt Siri didn't use much data at all, the lawsuit claims it as proof that Siri gobbles huge amounts of monthly data.)
When we recently surveyed Ars readers on their Siri usage, almost 30 percent of the 2,801 votes we received said that they no longer use the assistant because they tried it and didn't like it. Another 20 percent said they still use it but have complaints, while 22.5 percent said they still use it and like its functionality. Indeed, Siri is technically still in beta (and we felt that was an appropriate label when reviewing it), so perhaps Apple should consider laying off the marketing until Siri moves out of beta—or becomes more reliable for a larger swath of users.
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Google Drive leaked screenshots show up to 5GB free storage
Google Drive rumors have been piling up lately, with the service reportedly on the verge of launching in the first or second week of April. Now the site TalkAndroid says it has unearthed screenshots from a Google source that show up to 5GB of free storage for each user.
Earlier this week, the site showed a screenshot indicating that everyone who signs up for Google Drive will get 2GB of free space. Yesterday, the site followed up with another shot indicating that the number will actually be 5GB for everyone.

Purported leaked screenshot of Google Drive download page
Why the screenshots would show different starting sizes is unclear. Assuming the images are real, they could have been taken from different stages of development, or may not be representative of the final version that Google will offer.
Google Drive has been rumored for years. The Wall Street Journal said in February that it would finally be released in as little as a few weeks. GigaOm reported this week that the release date is expected to be in the first week of April. There are already numerous online storage services offering free space. Dropbox, the most popular one, offers 2GB free to everyone, while Box offers 5GB for free.
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Op-ed: Blocking used games unlikely to kill the console game market
Since rumors first surfaced earlier this week that Sony may be planning to effectively block used games from working on the follow-up to the PlayStation 3 (following similar rumors about Microsoft's next system that leaked earlier in the year), I've been hearing some gamers and industry watchers suggest that such a move would be market suicide for any console maker foolish enough to go through with it. Despite publishers agitating for an aggressive stance against what's seen as a revenue-draining scourge, console makers that actually took steps to block used games would face a consumer backlash and reduction in demand that would easily outweigh any supposed benefits from the scheme, or so the argument goes.
While that's certainly a possibility, thinking through the standard arguments regarding the potential market impact of a used-game-free console leads me to think that such a move probably wouldn't make a significant dent in the bottom line for console makers or publishers.

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Chrome 18 arrives with hardware-accelerated Canvas
Version 18 of the Chrome Web browser has rolled out to the stable channel. The new version includes hardware-accelerated rendering for the HTML5 Canvas element on Windows and Mac OS X.
As we have recently reported, standards-based Web technologies provide an increasingly capable platform for game development. The major browser vendors are working to further increase the viability of open standards for browser-based gaming. Offloading Canvas rendering to the GPU helps reduce the CPU load of 2D games and improves performance. The feature has been available in Chrome for quite some time, but it's now finally enabled by default.
Hardware-accelerated Canvas rendering is only available on systems with compatible graphics hardware. You can get some information about what features in Chrome have hardware acceleration enabled on your system by navigating to the "chrome://gpu" URL.
Another key open standard that is relevant for gaming is WebGL, which provides JavaScript APIs for rendering 3D content in the Canvas element. In Chrome 18, Google has introduced a software-based backend for WebGL based on TransGaming's SwiftShader. This will make it possible for users to view WebGL content on computers that don't have compatible graphics hardware. Although it will open up WebGL content to more users, the software-based renderer doesn't offer comparable performance to native hardware-accelerated WebGL.
In addition to these improvements, the Chrome developers have also been working to make various security improvements based on vulnerabilities that were exposed during the Pwnium competition. For more details about the Chrome 18 release, you can refer to the official release announcement. The software is available for download from Google's website.
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Tweet seats suit claims the process has been patented
Whether you love tweet seats or loathe them, you probably never thought they were patentable. But one company, Inselberg Interactive, insists it has already patented the seats, and is pressing Goodspeed Musicals in East Haddam, Connecticut to license their patented platform or desist from hosting "tweet seats" nights.
Tweet seats are a section of a live theater cordoned off (metaphorically if not physically) for people who wish to live tweet the performance taking place on the stage below. Inselberg believes its patent covers the entire process of tweet seating and has directed Chicago-based Global IP Law Group to pursue the case.

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