Hulu's Streaming Shows Reel in Viewers
Hulu.com, a well-made site offering free, ad-supported streaming TV shows and movies through a Web browser, now tops CNN and Turner in U.S. video site rankings, according to Nielsen stats relayed by Silicon Alley Insider.
Despite an official launch only five months ago and a relatively small library of shows and movies, the site offered up 105 million streams in July, just behind ESPN's 106 million streams.
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Online Investing Web Site Picks
Sure, Yahoo Finance rocks. But plenty of other, smaller sites offer good data for the online investor. Yesterday's San Francisco Chronicle outlined seven of them.
In Harry Domash's piece, most of the seven were new to me, though I had written about one of them (tickerspy.com) here previously.
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Discover Your Solar Savings at Roofray
With the constant flow of me-too social networking sites these days, it's nice to see a well-made site that identifies a real need and meets it. For solar power planning, that's Roofray.com, which just launched this week.
For your own custom plans, head to the site and start with a satellite view of an address you enter. Then define the solar panel coverage area by adding successive points around space where you'd put panels.
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Write for Cash Tips on Salon.com
Creative types have a new option for turning their efforts into income online. Open Salon, now out of private beta, allows anyone to post their work after a quick registration.
Those posts can earn money, but unlike Google's new Knol, income doesn't come from ads. Instead, readers can click a small button to tip the writer through a system called Tippem.
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Mozilla Wants You to Redesign Firefox
The Mozilla Labs, which acts as the idea wing for the organization behind Firefox, is expanding its call for open-source contributions to those outside its base of community-minded coders and techies. Now, they want to get designers and creative types in on the deal.
When I chatted with Chris Beard, Vice President of Mozilla Labs, he talked about how the basic browser UI really hasn't changed much. In part, that's intentional - when I've talked with other folks at Mozilla, the people with their sleeves rolled and their fingers typing as they get new versions pushed out the door, they tend to say that they and Firefox users are content with the basic browser design.
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Typosquatting as Corporate Espionage
Typosquatting, that seedy practice of registering domain names similar to legit sites but with typos in the name, has a new twist.
At a Black Hat presentation last week on a Symantec long-term research on the practice as it cropped up in the 2008 election campaign, Oliver Friedrichs found an interesting tidbit. A typosquatting domain registered to someone in China had no Web page, but it did have a record that allowed it to receive e-mail.
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Protecting Against the Critical DNS Bug: Executive Summary
Attack details on how to quickly take over a vulnerable DNS server - essential for every network to guide Internet traffic - are now officially public after researcher Dan Kaminsky's BlackHat presentation. If you want to make sure your company is safe, here's what you need to know.
1. It's real. While some have charged that the risk has been overblown, it's clear that the flaw allows for hijacking an entire network's Internet traffic. All e-mails sent outside the company could be intercepted. Any attempt to visit any external Web site from a company PC could be forced to run an attack page instead. Similar flaws have been hit before in just such ways.
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Cloud Computing, Microsoft's Midori, and the End of Windows
Cloud computing, which offloads applications from local PC installations to the Internet or company networks, stands poised to free business from many uncomfortable tethers. For one thing, those local PC installations, and the operating systems they require, can be a royal pain to manage and update. Not to mention the potential for data loss with local storage - sure, you can create good backup policies and train users to store files on network drives, but you're still going to run into situations where a drive blows and someone loses a critical document.
Software-as-as-service and network-hosted applications are going gangbusters precisely because they stand to do away with those limitations. A new special report section from BusinessWeek on cloud computing, with articles such as How Cloud Computing Is Changing the World and Cloud Computing: Small Companies Take Flight cover the benefits of systems like Google Apps and Salesforce.com for businesses large and small.
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Web-to-mail Service Gets Around Work Site Bans
If your company blocks your favorite blog and you absolutely can't wait to read the latest post (and you don't have a smartphone capable of browsing), then a new site has a free solution for you.
Send WebToMail an e-mail (at send@webtomail.co.cc) with a URL as the subject, and a few minutes later you'll receive an HTML e-mail of that page. The e-mail won't look the same as the page in a browser, as it won't arrange menus and site navigation properly, but it includes images and works fine to read the content on the page.
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Norton Safe Web Beta Competes with SiteAdvisor
Symantec yesterday announced the beta for its Norton Safe Web, a service meant to directly compete with McAfee's popular SiteAdvisor. But unlike SiteAdvisor, which is available as a free download to anyone using Firefox or IE, the Safe Web beta toolbar is currently only available for those beta testing Norton Internet Security 2009.
Symantec's announcement post says the beta will "provide visual site ratings within everyday search results from top search sites like Google, Yahoo! and Live Search," and "also warn users before they visit a site that contains malicious content."
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