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GMO Trilogy – Unnatural Selection (part 1)

Posted by Ken on April 14, 2011 in General Infomation |

I found this and thought I would share, I do not know how long this will be available. so see it while you can

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HTC Sensation 4G: T-Mobile Unveils Its Most Powerful Handset

Posted by Ken on April 13, 2011 in Android, Smart Phones |

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Detect man-in-the-middle attacks, code an Android live wallpaper, what happened to BeOS and …

Posted by Ken on April 8, 2011 in General Tech, Hacking |

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Dual-core HTC Pyramid superphone coming to T-Mobile by May

Posted by Ken on April 6, 2011 in Android, Smart Phones, T-Mobile |

Rumor: Dual-core HTC Pyramid superphone coming to T-Mobile by May

Let me be the first to admit that not everything in my last rumor report came true, but it was pretty darn close. Google unveiled their web-based Android Market and we heard that the music store is finished, but legal wrangling is still holding it up. Today we received another hot tip on HTC’s next big Android phone and I’ve confirmed it with several sources so check out the details after the jump.

The Rumor

HTC’s first dual-core Android smartphone is codenamed Pyramid. It features a dual-core 1.2 GHz Snapdragon processor (MSM8260), 4.3 inch qHD display, and support for HSPA+ networks. T-Mobile has picked up the phone and their target release date is May 2011.

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Why You Might Want to Stick With Your ISP’s DNS Server After All

Posted by Ken on April 4, 2011 in Computer, General Tech |

Why You Might Want to Stick With Your ISP's DNS Server After All

Many of us use public DNS servers like Google Public DNS and Open DNS for faster web browsing and other benefits. But in some cases your ISP’s DNS server is much faster. Weblog Digital Inspiration illustrates why and when this might be.

It’s all about your IP address. As Digital Inspiration explains, all of the major websites use Content Delivery Networks like Amazon and Akamai to serve up the content. A CDN looks up your computer’s IP address to direct you to the nearest server, but because a public DNS server passes requests anonymously or without your precise location, the CDN might serve you content from a server that’s actually not the closest one to you. Your download speeds will thus be slower than if you were using your ISP’s DNS server.

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