Today SCEE Content Manager Nina Scherer has shared this week's SingStore update, as follows:
It’s good to be back with the SingStore update!
Some great tracks this week from Blondie with ‘Rapture’, Spandau Ballet’s ‘Through The Barricades’ and ‘Here Comes your Man’ by The Pixies. Please check out the whole list of tracks and artists below.
These alleged screenshots of Google's Chrome OS —with a Mac OS X-inspired dock— may be real, apparently from an unconfirmed source sent to Mashable.com (linked above) from Development BETA 0.1.15.
To quote: An unfamiliar source sent us these, which claim to be screenshots of the upcoming Google Chrome OS.
Too much heat can put laptops and other devices out of action, so manufacturers equip them with metal plates to discharge it.
A new composite can do this better, to quote:
While portable computers were still rather cumbersome several years ago, they now easily fit inside small briefcases. This is because the components on the substrates and microchips are...
The honeymoon appears to be over for Internet Explorer 8 - and it wasn't much of a honeymoon to begin with, either. Just days after the browser's big debut, its market share has fallen a full 28 percent from its peak.
Alternative browsers, meanwhile, have held steady ground, losing no significant number of users to Microsoft's new offering.
Firefox is eroding Internet Explorer's reign as the most popular Internet browser.
An online study conducted by marketing research firm Fittkau & Maass showed that 38.4 per cent of German-speaking Internet users browse either with Firefox version 3.x or 2.x.
The Internet Explorer 7.x version accounted for 37.2 per cent of the same group, while the previous...
Microsoft researchers are working on a new browser called Gazelle which it promises will have some impressive new features and capabilities.
The firm released a research paper (PDF) late last week, saying that the new browser would offer significant security improvements compared to other browsers, including Internet Explorer.
The European Union's antitrust investigation team has released preliminary statements on how it will rule on the question of whether Microsoft abused its dominant market position to push the adoption of Internet Explorer; the remarks are not encouraging.
The investigation is not over—Microsoft still has time to issue its own formal response to further concerns the EU...