internet Archive

  • You can now watch UFC on your Roku box

    You can now watch UFC on your Roku box

    UFC President Dana White believes the Internet is the future of television, so this Roku deal makes all kinds of sense. Beginning with next week's pay-per-view, UFC 114, Roku owners will be able to stream live UFC events right to their TV. It's in HD, too. Nothing but the best for you guys!

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  • England manager delays launch of player-tracking Web site amid criticism

    England manager delays launch of player-tracking Web site amid criticism

    People who hate to see technology in soccer, rejoice! England manager Fabio Capello has delayed the launch of the so-called Capello Index, a Web site that would have tracked various statistical measures of England players. It was to have started with the World Cup next month and continue into the Premier League season, but the whole project has been shelved for the time being.

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  • Web now supports non-Latin characters for addresses

    Web now supports non-Latin characters for addresses

    Pretty important day in the history of the World Wide Web, if not the Internet as a whole. ICANN, sorta the Internet's regulator, will for the first time now allow non-Latin characters for Web addresses. That means that, if we wanted, sometime in the future we could register a Russian version of CrunchGear.com at KPYHЧГИP.PYC (that's just an example, who knows what the actual Russian country code will be). Took them long enough!

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  • Where were you when the ILOVEYOU virus was all the rage?

    Where were you when the ILOVEYOU virus was all the rage?

    It was 10 years ago that FC Bayern Munich beat Valencia CF for the UEFA Champions League. (Incidentally, FC Bayern Munich may win again this year when it plays FC Internationale on May 22, but my money's on Inter; the bookies agree) Also 10 years ago: the Lovebug virus wreaked havoc on the Internet. Where were you during this trying time?

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  • Spiffy new version of Opera hits Mac (both Intel and PPC)

    Spiffy new version of Opera hits Mac (both Intel and PPC)

    Heads up to you Mac folk. Opera has released a new version of its eponymous browser, version 10.52, that brings a number of improvements to the game. Might be we worth a look if you're tired of Safari and Firefox, or don't want to subject yourself to the Google borg with Chrome.

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  • FCC pressing for AllVid to replace Cable Cards

    FCC pressing for AllVid to replace Cable Cards

    Looks like the FCC wants to replace your Cable Card with, I don't know, something useful. The new device, dubbed "AllVid," would work with a variety of media—TVs, computers, and the like—to deliver "multichannel video programming and Internet content." And I'm the Queen of England~!

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  • What’s the fastest Internet city in America?

    What’s the fastest Internet city in America?

    Remember when 56K modems first came out? I remember walking around the mall thinking to myself, "Man, the Internet must be so fast with that thing!" I mention this because Akamai Technologies, the company which pretty much powers the Internet's biggest sites, has published a list of the fastest Internet cities in America. The winner is Berkley, Calif., which has an average Internet speed of 18.7 Mbps, followed by Chappel Hill, NC (17.5Mbps), and Stanford, Calif. (17.0 Mbps). Notice anything? Yes, those cities are the home of large research universities. Gotta trade noted across the world lickety-split!

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  • If you’re selling pirated games over the Internet you deserve to be locked up for being a fool

    If you’re selling pirated games over the Internet you deserve to be locked up for being a fool

    Don't mess with Canada, I suppose. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrested someone last month for selling pirated games over the Internet. Of all the dumb things I've read, that's right up there with the best of them. Like, selling pirated video games on the Internet should be featured in "World's Dumbest Criminals" on some trash-television channel.

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  • FoxSoccer.tv learns that Web sites work best when they’re actually online

    FoxSoccer.tv learns that Web sites work best when they’re actually online

    Call me crazy, but Web sites usually work best when they're online. Nobody knows this better than we do here at CrunchGear, where the site is down a good 20 percent of the time. But at the very least you're not paying for our crummy service, unlike the poor FoxSoccer.tv customers. Fox wants $45 per season for online access to a whole host of content, including live games from all over the world. It's really not a bad service when it works, but when it doesn't work people freak out, and rightfully so.

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  • Big time World Cup sponsors like Sony and Adidas are failing at the Internet

    Big time World Cup sponsors like Sony and Adidas are failing at the Internet

    You guys have heard of Google, right? Congratulations, you're smarter than the likes of Sonyand Adidas! A new study has found that these companies, and other prominent FIFA World Cup sponsors, like Coca-Cola and Emirates, have failed to leverage Google (specifically) and the Internet (more generally) to link themselves to the event. You'd think that after shelling out so much money to be known as "the official TV of the FIFA World Cup" or whatever they'd have a guy making sure their Web sites pop up when you search for, you know, "soccer world cup" and "world cup 2010." I wouldn't be surprised if CrunchGear ranks higher in Google searches at this point!

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  • Apple promotes ‘iPad ready’ Web sites that abide by open standards

    Apple promotes ‘iPad ready’ Web sites that abide by open standards

    Something called the iPad comes out in a few days, and I'm not quite sure what it is. It's like a less powerful laptop, right? Hmm... Anyhow, Apple has published a lists of sites that are now 100 percent "iPad ready." Anyone else looking forward to sites having giant "Works With iPad!" banners and buttons and whatnot?

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  • UFC (along with SpikeTV) embraces the Internet, launches Ultimate Fighter Web site: Full streaming episodes, Twitter & Facebook integration

    UFC (along with SpikeTV) embraces the Internet, launches Ultimate Fighter Web site: Full streaming episodes, Twitter & Facebook integration

    All that talk of UFCnot “getting” the Internet? Yeah, it's time to put that idea to rest. The company's longtime TV partner, SpikeTV, launched ultimatefighter.com earlier today, a place where mixed martial arts fans can watch the entire Ultimate Fighter library online. For free. Let that sink in—still think Dana White hates the Internet? In addition to serving up all 231 fights in the show's history, fans can also interact with each other on social networking services like Twitterand Facebook. Not a bad job, really.

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  • It’s all well and good to demand secure electronic medical records, but when has your data ever been secure in the first place?

    It’s all well and good to demand secure electronic medical records, but when has your data ever been secure in the first place?

    Pretty much spot-on, this. There's an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal that argues that Americans should badger Congress and the president, asking them to hold off on doling out stimulus dollars to electronic medical record systems that don't have appropriate privacy safeguards in place. As it stands, electronic medial records aren't exactly sealed—insurance companies can peek at them, as can pharmaceutical companies. So, let's instead focus on creating an electronic medical record system that's as foolproof as possible. Slight issue: when is your data, medical or otherwise, ever truly secure?

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  • Seattle is the most dangerous place in cyberspace

    Seattle is the most dangerous place in cyberspace

    Symantec published a report recently listing the 50 riskiest places to be online, as apparently having that many beardos in one place can only result in evil. Seattle made the top of the list, however San Fransisco, Boston, and Washington D.C. made it up near the top as well.

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