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In today's podcast: Nvidia hits back at Intel with lawsuit; Google lays off 200 workers; and Dell faces sex-discrimination suit.
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The White House's Open for Questions service sought to learn what concerns Americans most. The answer appears to be getting high.
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In Thursday's IT Blogwatch, we read while we wait to watch Obama answer questions from around the Interwebs. Not to mention never gonna give you up ...
We all know the Great Firewall of China keeps an eye out for anything critical of the Chinese government. One has to wonder though how China's billion or so citizens like being blocked out of one of the most popular sites on the Internet - for no explicable reason.
Yes, you too can be like the White House press corps and grill the president. Just submit a question to the new Obama Web site and hope you get lucky.
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The White House launched its Open for Questions service to field questions and concerns from citizens. Obama to respond on Thursday.
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TomTom has decided to fight Microsoft, and it's not going to be fighting alone. TomTom has just joined the Open Invention Network patent alliance. Bring it on Microsoft, bring it on.
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In Friday's IT Blogwatch, Richi Jennings watches TomTom counter-sue Microsoft -- can you say, "leverage"? Not to mention Google Gravity...
In Thursday's IT Blogwatch, Richi Jennings watches privacy activists get all hot under the collar over Google's cloud computing tentacles. Not to mention the subtlest Trek joke ever...
The privacy group Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has asked the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Google for privacy breaches related to Google Docs and other Google services --- and to ban Google from offering any cloud services, including Gmail, Google Docs and others until the company can prove it is capable of safeguarding people's privacy.
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In Wednesday's IT Blogwatch, Richi Jennings watches bloggers ask, "Is IBM buying Sun?" Not to mention 61 things on my cat...
(IBM) (JAVA)
Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa is one of the most vocal opponents of the H-1B visa program in the country, and is a hero to many in the anti-H-1B crowd. But his clarity of thought has to be questioned in light of his suggestion that executives at AIG should kill themselves.
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