Tag Archives: World Wide Web

Report: BMW web sales plan opposed by German dealers

By Brandon Turkus

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Tesla isn’t the only manufacturer that is facing a backlash over its plans to sell cars directly to customers. BMW is under fire from its German dealerships over its desire to sell its cars via the internet.

BMW has plans to sell the new i3 through the World Wide Web, while a “Mobile Sales Force” will be making house calls. According to Automotive News Europe, Head of German Sales Roland Krueger told German weekly Wirtschaftswoche, “We can imagine that Internet sales could be expanded to all models.” This is the particular caveat that has traditional brick-and-mortar dealers so up in arms.

According to the head of BMW’s German dealerships Werner Entenmann, “We told BMW in no uncertain terms that we cannot accept direct sales channels.” Reuters reports that an anonymous dealer has gone so far as to pledge not to use the sales force in Germany. Krueger, for what it’s worth, told Wirtschaftswoche that the “backbone” of BMW sales will still be traditional dealerships.

BMW web sales plan opposed by German dealers originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 23 Jul 2013 08:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Creating 3D Spaces On-Demand

By Josh Wolfe, Contributor

The excerpt below comes from our recent full-length interview with Matt Bell, co-founder and CEO of Matterport. Matt shares how state-of-the-art computer vision and low-cost 3D cameras are being combined to create a brand new market in communicating 3D spaces. The company promises to make it easy to capture our physical worlds for sharing via the World Wide Web, and hopes to revolutionize everything from real estate to remodeling along the way.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/joshwolfe/2013/04/12/creating-3d-spaces-on-demand/

'Doctor Who' Review: 'Bells of St. John' Is a World Wide Web of Intrigue

By Carol Pinchefsky, Contributor

This is only the second time in Doctor Who history that the phone in the police callbox-shaped TARDIS has rung. The first time was in “The Doctor Dances,” a season 1 (or season 27/28, depending on how you count it) episode, but that was an effect of electricity and nanogenes and whatnot. “The Bells of St. John” marks the first time that the phone box has actually been used to receive a telephone call. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

North Korea accuses US, South Korea of causing Internet outage in cyber attack

North Korea says South Korea and the U.S. are behind a temporary Internet shut down this week. But an expert says it’s too early to determine what happened.

The official Korean Central News Agency provided few details in its claim Friday of an attack.

Foreigners in Pyongyang reported no Internet access Wednesday and Thursday. The Bangkok-based company that operates North Korea‘s Internet confirms a cyberattack but says networks are normal Friday.

South Korea denies the allegation. The U.S. military declined to comment. A security expert says cyberattack investigations can take months, and that individual hackers are more likely to blame than governments in this case.

Only a small number of approved North Koreans can surf the World Wide Web.

Pyongyang also criticizes U.S.-South Korean military drills and new UN sanctions.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Mentor Graphics President, Gregory K. Hinckley, to Present at the Sidoti 17th Annual Emerging Growth

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Mentor Graphics President, Gregory K. Hinckley, to Present at the Sidoti 17 th Annual Emerging Growth Institutional Investor Forum

WILSONVILLE, Ore.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Mentor Graphics Corporation (NAS: MENT) today announced that Gregory K. Hinckley, President, will present at the Sidoti 17th Annual Emerging Growth Institutional Investor Forum.


Who:
Gregory K. Hinckley, President of Mentor Graphics Corporation


When:
Tuesday, March 19, 2013, 10:40 a.m. Eastern Time


Where:
The Grand Hyatt New York

About Mentor Graphics

Mentor Graphics Corporation is a world leader in electronic hardware and software design solutions, providing products, consulting services and award-winning support for the world’s most successful electronic, semiconductor and systems companies. Established in 1981, the company reported revenues in the last fiscal year of about $1,090 million. Corporate headquarters are located at 8005 S.W. Boeckman Road, Wilsonville, Oregon 97070-7777. World Wide Web site: http://www.mentor.com/.

(Mentor Graphics is a registered trademark of Mentor Graphics Corporation. All other company or product names are the registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective owners.)

Mentor Graphics
Monte Koller, 503-685-1462
monte_koller@mentor.com

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  Oregon

INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:

The article Mentor Graphics President, Gregory K. Hinckley, to Present at the Sidoti 17th Annual Emerging Growth Institutional Investor Forum originally appeared on Fool.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

ownCloud 5 released: a vision realized, a vision expanded

Today we released ownCloud 5, a very important milestone for the ownCloud community and perhaps the most important release so far. But before going into the details I want to take a step back and look at what the original idea of ownCloud was at the beginning.
The idea of ownCloud was and is to enable everybody to host, control and sync and share their personal data without giving control away to the big data silos like Dropbox, Google Drive, Skydrive and iCloud. I think today we have all the features in place to say that we reached this goal. Everybody from a home user to a big enterprise can host their own personal cloud installation. I’m also super happy about the integration into KDE and GNOME because this is important to provide a really seamless experience for users.
It’s a coincidence that CERN invited me to give a talk about ownCloud and data silos that I will give here in a few hours at the exact same day ownCloud 5 is released. CERN is also the place where Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web 22 years ago. It’s interesting that the Web was built as a completely decentralized system where no distinction between someone who is publishing data and someone who is consuming data exists. There is no concept of a centralized entity that everybody connects to. Everybody can be sender and receiver at the same time. Just as Berthold Brecht proposed in 1932.
Interestingly, the web looks a bit different today where a huge amount of the traffic goes through websites like Facebook, Google, Dropbox and Amazon. Where is the idea of a decentralized and federated web?
Today we are deciding how the world will look like in the future. We, the IT community, set the course of the train that is called “open society” now and we can decide into which station the train will roll into in 5-10 years. Is it the one where all the people still control their own data and information and can decide who has access to the personal files, photos, contacts, location data, chat messages and other personal information or will we live in a future where all the personal data of all the people in the world are stored on the servers of just a few big organizations and commercial interests, terms of services and secret services decide who has access to the digital life of everybody?
If you care about these questions then join the ownCloud community or other free software projects and work on decentralized and federated alternatives.
ownCloud 5 is the result of the work of our awesome developer community. More and more people join and are getting more involved. To me this is a sign that we are doing something right and that ownCloud is not just a crazy idea that no one needs but something that is very important to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet KDE

Confused About Open Web Standards? Allow Tim Berners-Lee To Explain

By J.J. Colao, Forbes Staff An idiot journalist once introduced Tim Berners-Lee as the “Inventor of the Internet.” He was quickly and firmly corrected by the man himself, who pointed out that the he invented the World Wide Web, not the Internet. (The Internet refers to technology that allows one computer to communicate with another within a network. When we refer to “the Internet”, we really mean “the Web”, which is the most widely used, standardized means of accessing and connecting those networks.) After a bit of a rocky start, my interview with Sir Berners-Lee and Karen Bartleson, president of the IEEE Standards Association, progressed–in large part–smoothly. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Iceland's plan to ban Internet porn sparks uproar

In the age of instant information, globe-spanning viral videos and the World Wide Web, can a thoroughly wired country become a porn-free zone? Authorities in Iceland want to find out.

The government of the tiny North Atlantic nation is drafting plans to ban pornography, in print and online, in an attempt to protect children from a tide of violent sexual imagery.

The proposal by Interior Minister Ogmundur Jonasson has caused an uproar. Opponents say the move will censor the Web, encourage authoritarian regimes and undermine Iceland‘s reputation as a Scandinavian bastion of free speech.

Advocates say it is a sensible measure that will shelter children from serious harm.

“When a 12 year old types ‘porn’ into Google, he or she is not going to find photos of naked women out on a country field, but very hardcore and brutal violence,” said Halla Gunnarsdottir, political adviser to the interior minister.

“There are laws in our society. Why should they not apply to the Internet?”

Gunnarsdottir says the proposals currently being drawn up by a committee of experts will not introduce new restrictions, but simply uphold an existing if vaguely worded law.

Pornography is already banned in Iceland, and has been for decades — but the term is not defined, so the law is not enforced. Magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse are on sale in book stores, and more hard-core material can be bought from a handful of sex shops. “Adult” channels form part of digital TV packages.

Iceland‘s left-of-center government insists it is not setting out to sweep away racy magazines or censor sex. The ban would define pornography as material with violent or degrading content.

Gunnarsdottir said the committee is still exploring the details of how a porn ban could be enforced. One possibility would be to make it illegal to pay for porn with Icelandic credit cards. Another, more controversial, route would be a national Internet filter or a list of website addresses to be blocked.

That idea has Internet-freedom advocates alarmed.

“This kind of thing does not work. It is technically impossible to do in a way that has the intended effect,” said …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Government's plan to ban Internet porn in Iceland sparks uproar

In the age of instant information, globe-spanning viral videos and the World Wide Web, can a thoroughly wired country become a porn-free zone? Authorities in Iceland want to find out.

The government of the tiny North Atlantic nation is drafting plans to ban pornography, in print and online, in an attempt to protect children from a tide of violent sexual imagery.

The proposal by Interior Minister Ogmundur Jonasson has caused an uproar. Opponents say the move will censor the Web, encourage authoritarian regimes and undermine Iceland‘s reputation as a Scandinavian bastion of free speech.

Advocates say it is a sensible measure that will shelter children from serious harm.

“When a 12 year old types `porn’ into Google, he or she is not going to find photos of naked women out on a country field, but very hardcore and brutal violence,” said Halla Gunnarsdottir, political adviser to the interior minister.

“There are laws in our society. Why should they not apply to the Internet?”

Gunnarsdottir says the proposals currently being drawn up by a committee of experts will not introduce new restrictions, but simply uphold an existing if vaguely worded law.

Pornography is already banned in Iceland, and has been for decades — but the term is not defined, so the law is not enforced. Magazines such as Playboy and Penthouse are on sale in book stores, and more hard-core material can be bought from a handful of sex shops. “Adult” channels form part of digital TV packages.

Iceland‘s left-of-center government insists it is not setting out to sweep away racy magazines or censor sex. The ban would define pornography as material with violent or degrading content.

Gunnarsdottir said the committee is still exploring the details of how a porn ban could be enforced. One possibility would be to make it illegal to pay for porn with Icelandic credit cards. Another, more controversial, route would be a national Internet filter or a list of website addresses to be blocked.

That idea has Internet-freedom advocates alarmed.

“This kind of thing does not work. It is technically impossible to do in a way that has the intended effect,” said Smari McCarthy of free-speech group the International Modern Media Institute. “And it has negative side effects — everything from slowing down the Internet to blocking content that is not meant to be blocked to just generally opening up a whole can of worms regarding human rights issues, access to information and freedom of expression.”

Despite its often chaotic appearance, the Internet is not a wholly lawless place. It is regulated, to varying degrees, around the world. Police monitor the net for child pornography and other illegal material, and service providers in many countries block offending sites.

Some governments also censor the Internet at a national level — though the likes of authoritarian Iran, North Korea and China are not countries liberal Iceland wants to emulate.

European countries including Britain, Sweden and Denmark ask Internet service providers to block child pornography websites, measures that have met with only limited opposition.

But broader filtering has mostly been resisted. A few years …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

North Korea to allow foreigners to use mobile internet

North Korea will soon allow foreigners to tweet, Skype and surf the Internet from their cellphones, iPads and other mobile devices in its second relaxation of controls on communications in recent weeks. However, North Korean citizens will not have access to the mobile Internet service to be offered by provider Koryolink within the next week.

Koryolink, a joint venture between Korea Post & Telecommunications Corporation and Egypt’s Orascom Telecom Media and Technology Holding SAE, informed foreign residents in Pyongyang on Friday that it will launch a third generation, or 3G, mobile Internet service no later than March 1.

The announcement comes just weeks after North Korea began allowing foreigners to bring their own cellphones into the country to use with Koryolink SIM cards, reversing a longstanding rule requiring most visitors to relinquish their phones at customs and leaving many without easy means of communication with the outside world.

The two changes in policy mean foreigners in North Korea will have unprecedented connectivity while living, working or traveling in a country long regarded as one of the most isolated nations in the world.

However, wireless Internet will not yet be offered to North Koreans, who are governed by a separate set of telecommunication rules from foreigners. North Koreans will be allowed to access certain 3G services, including SMS and MMS messaging, video calls and subscriptions to the state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper — but not the global Internet.

The lack of Internet access in North Korea has put the country at the bottom of Internet freedom surveys. Though North Korea is equipped for broadband Internet, only a small, approved segment of the population has access to the World Wide Web.

During a visit to Pyongyang early last month, Google’s executive chairman pressed the North Koreans to expand access to the Internet. Eric Schmidt noted that it would be “very easy” for North Korea to offer Internet on Koryolink’s fast-expanding 3G cellphone network.

“As the world becomes increasingly connected, the North Korean decision to be virtually isolated is very much going to affect their physical world and their economic growth,” he wrote in a Jan. 20 blog post after returning to the United States. “It will make it harder for them to catch up economically. It is their choice now, and in my view, it’s time for them to start, or they will remain behind.”

Soon after Schmidt’s visit, Google unveiled maps of North Korea with more details based on contributions from foreigners using satellite images and publicly available information to map the country. Before, North Korea was left mostly blank in Google Maps but with the update, Pyongyang and major North Korean cities are shown with street names, parks, roads, train stops and monuments.

Cellphone use has multiplied in North Korea since Orascom built a 3G network more than four years ago. More than a million people are now using mobile phones in North Korea, where the network now covers most major cities, according to Orascom.

Chinese-made Huawei cellphones sold by Koryolink are not cheap, with the most basic model costing about …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

WeChat By Tencent: From Chat App To Social Mobile Platform

By Lim Yung-Hui, Contributor Instant messaging is the killer app on desktops. From IRC to ICQ to AIM to Trillian to Yahoo! Messenger to (soon defunct) Microsoft’s Live Messenger to Facebook Messenger, millions around the world have been using instant messaging for real-time communication and collaboration since the dawn of the World Wide Web.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Cuba confirms undersea cable carrying data traffic

Cuba‘s state telecom monopoly confirmed Thursday that the island’s first hard-wired Internet connection to the outside world has been activated, but said it won’t lead to an immediate increase in access.

In a statement published in Communist Party newspaper Granma and other official media, ETECSA broke its long silence on the ALBA-1 fiber-optic cable, which island officials once boasted would increase capacity 3,000-fold.

Until now Cuba‘s Internet has been strictly via ponderous satellite links, and out of reach for the great majority of islanders. ETECSA said the new cable has been operational since August, initially carrying international voice calls, and the company has been conducting data traffic tests on the cable since Jan. 10.

“When the testing process concludes, the submarine cable being put into operation will not mean that possibilities for access will automatically multiply,” ETECSA said.

“It will be necessary to invest in internal telecommunications infrastructure,” the company said, adding that even then the goal is “gradual growth of a service that we offer mostly for free and with social aims in mind.”

The $70 million ALBA-1 arrived on the island from Venezuela in February 2011 to great hoopla, but officials soon stopped mentioning the cable amid rumors of mismanagement and corruption involving the project.

Its status was unknown until this week, when U.S. Internet analysis firm Renesys documented evidence of faster data traffic to Cuba and concluded that the cable had been switched on.

Dissident blogger Yoani Sanchez, an advocate for wider Internet dissemination, questioned whether the government would have said anything about the cable if Renesys and foreign media had not reported about it.

“#Granma says now it’s necessary to build infrastructure for the #FiberOpticCable to provide service!” she tweeted. “And what were they doing the past two years?”

Cuba has the second-worst Internet connectivity rate in the world, according to one study.

According to government statistics, about 16 percent of islanders have some online access, usually through their school or workplace and often just to an Intranet that also has email capability.

Just 2.9 percent of Cubans report having full access to the World Wide Web. However outside observers say the true number is more like 5 to 10 percent accounting for underreporting of dial-up minutes resold on the black market.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Steubenville: The Football-Related Rape Case The Internet Won't Let Fade Away

By Bob Cook, ContributorSlowly, then swiftly, reaction to formal rape accusations brought in August against two members of the Steubenville (Ohio) High School football team have moved from locally produced or of-interest-in-Steubenville-only tweets, Facebook posts and emails to a truly World Wide Web phenomenon. So much so, the groups Anonymous and KnightSec claimed […]
Source: Forbes Latest