Sony has also created a support page for subscribers to ask questions and get more information. The company is now investigating the incident and is directly contacting customers who may have been affected. Sony said it has fixed the problem and security has been restored. However, because the system does not display users' entire credit card numbers, it is "very unlikely" thieves were able to steal them. As a result, intruders could have seen users' personal information and used their online "wallets" at the store. "Although unlikely, it is possible that the passwords of a small percentage of PlayStation Network users may have been changed through unauthorized access," the company said. Sony said the security breach occurred at the PlayStation Store, a content download service of the network. Sony on Thursday reported that hackers may have penetrated security on the PlayStation network and gained access to some users' personal information. Beard told Webware that these are just a hint of some of the "crazy ideas" the development team is working on for the next-next-gen browser. This feature is set to be in its first stages in Firefox 3, but Firefox 4 will reportedly allow users to access these profiles on other browsers as well. In other words, users would be able to bring up their bookmarks, font settings and privacy preferences no matter which computer they use. The other big feature already unveiled for Firefox 4 is called "Weave." This is an option that would basically create a set of online preferences and settings that is stored for each user instead of each computer. For example, users would be able to visit websites and still access non-dynamic content even when they don't have an active Internet connection. One of the new features is called "Prism," a next-gen software technology that would allow users to run Web-based content offline. Webware spoke with Mozilla vice president Chris Beard, who mentioned two specific new concepts for Firefox 4 that will evolve the online experience and add greater integration with content stored on computer hard drives. The Calibre P960 is expected to be available soon.Īlthough Firefox 3 is still in research and development, Mozilla is already working on new features for the fourth version of its increasingly popular Web browser. When the GPU starts working, the copper core inside the aluminum die-casting thermal base will quickly take the working heat from the GPU to the heat-pipe horizontally put inside the thermal base, and the heat will be equably and rapidly spread to the left part and right part of the aluminum die-casting thermal base, at same time, the two circular heat pipes also quickly bring the heat from GPU to the 0.2 mm thin cooling fins, now the strong wind pressure and airflow made by two cooling fans take all the heat out of the cooling module." The actual gain from Dual Fly is up to 10☌ cooler GPU, 5☌ cooler case temperature and less noise (around 29dB). According to the company's PR "This high-efficient Cooling System developed by SPARKLE itself consists of aluminum die-casting thermal base with copper core inside, three high-efficient heat pipes and dual cooling fans with 0.2 mm thin cooling fins. The most interesting part is the cooler though. The card comes factory overclocked with a core running at 700MHz, 1850MHz shader clock and 512MB GDDR3 memory at 2.0GHz using 256-bit memory interface. Sparkle Computer has introduced a non-reference GeForce 9600GT using a new Dual Fly cooling. The two parties are now awaiting a summary judgement in the case. Mr Donnelly says his tool does not infringe Blizzard's copyright because no "copy" of the Warcraft game client software is ever made. More than 100,000 copies of the tool have been sold for the time being. As result Blizzard wants Michael Donnelly to stop selling Glider and return all profits that he made from its sales. In its legal submission to the court last week, the firm said: "Blizzard's designs expectations are frustrated, and resources are allocated unevenly, when bots are introduced into the WoW universe, because bots spend far more time in-game than an ordinary player would and consume resources the entire time." Blizzard argued that Michael Donnelly's tool also infringed the End User License Agreement that all parties have to adhere to when playing the game. Blizzard says Glide is a software bot which infringes the company's copyright and potentially damages the game. Both sides have submitted legal summaries to the US District Court in Arizona. Blizzard is suing Michael Donnelly, the creator of the MMO Glider program, which performs key tasks in the game automatically, such as fighting and other game actions.
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