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km_jain

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  1. SAN JOSE, Calif. - Visto Corp., a maker of mobile e-mail technology, has sued Microsoft Corp. for allegedly infringing on three of its patents related to how information is handled between servers and handheld devices such as cellular phones.
    The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified monetary damages and a permanent injunction to stop the infringement, was filed late Wednesday the same day Visto announced that NTP Inc. had acquired an equity stake in the company and signed a patent licensing deal.

    Visto's allegations against Microsoft and its Windows Mobile 5.0 are similar to NTP's against Research In Motion Ltd., which now faces the possible shutdown of its popular BlackBerry messaging service in the United States.

    "Windows Mobile 5.0 is an infringement of Visto's intellectual property of a technology that our firm created, patented and successfully sells on the market today," Visto CEO Brian Bogosian said Thursday.

    Jack Evans, a Microsoft spokesman, said the company has not completely reviewed the complaint and will not comment on it until it has done so.

    "Microsoft stands behind its products and respects intellectual property rights," he said.

    Visto claims Microsoft, as portable devices handle more e-mail, is making matters worse by bundling its Windows Mobile operating system with its market-leading Exchange e-mail server.

    "This method of bundling software has led Microsoft to be prosecuted by competition authorities in the past, and in this case, potentially increases the rate and manner in which their infringement on Visto's patents occurs," the company said.

    NTP's deal with Visto also could help it bolster its case against RIM as it can now say it is more than a company that just holds patents and litigates to enforce them. Under the agreement, Visto will have access to NTP's patent portfolio for the life of the patents.

    "This is a clear win for mobile email users everywhere as it provides them with a viable alternative to RIM that protects them from any NTP litigation risk," Donald E. Stout, NTP's co-founder.

    Visto, based in Redwood Shores, Calif., said its clients include Cingular, Sprint-Nextel, the Vodafone Group and Rogers Wireless. It has more than 300 employees and holds 25 patents.

    The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court in Marshall, Texas.

    Shares of Microsoft fell 17 cents to close at $26.92 Thursday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

    Notice from jlhaslip:
    news items such as this should be in First Information Reports" and quoted. Merry Xmas.


  2. NEW YORK - In the year 2009, on the 25th of April, a man named Greg is supposed to get an e-mail. The e-mail will remind Greg that he is his best friend and worst enemy, that he once dated a woman named Michelle, and that he planned to major in computer science.
    "More importantly," the e-mail says, "are you wearing women's clothing?"

    The e-mail was sent by none other than Greg himself through a Web site called FutureMe.org.

    The site is one of a handful that let people send e-mails to themselves and others years in the future. They are technology's answer to time capsules, trading on people's sense of curiosity, accountability and nostalgia.

    "Messages into the future is something that people have always sought to do," said Paul Saffo, director of the Institute for the Future. "In a way, it's a statement of optimism."

    Matt Sly, 29, came up with the concept for FutureMe.org about four years ago. He was inspired one day after recalling how during his education he had been given assignments to write letters to himself.

    Sly, who partnered with 31-year-old Jay Patrikios of San Francisco on the project, said the site has made maybe $58 through donations. He is adamant that FutureMe.org is not a reminder service and that users should think long-term.

    The site lets people send messages 30 years from now, though Sly's numbers show most users schedule their e-mails to be sent within three years.

    "We want people to think about their future and what their goals and dreams and hopes and fears are," he said. "We're trying to facilitate some serious existential pondering."

    He said a large number of the messages sent do one of two basic things: tell the future person what the past person was doing at the time, and ask the future person if he or she had met the aspirations of the past person.

    "The tone of the past person is not always friendly," said Sly, now a Yale University graduate student. "It's often like 'Get off your lazy butt.'"

    Recently, Forbes.com jumped on the idea, offering an "e-mail time capsule" promotion. More than 140,000 letters were collected over about six weeks. Nearly 20 percent of the messages sent are supposed to land in the sender's inbox in 20 years; others requested shorter time frames. Forbes.com is partnering with Yahoo! and Codefix Consulting on the project.

    "A lot of people have kind of been freaked out by it," said David Ewalt, a Forbes.com writer who worked on the project. "It really makes you stop and think about your life in a way that you usually don't."

    Another type of future message service can be found at sites such as myLastEmail.com or LastWishes.com, which promise to send messages to loved ones (or less-than-loved ones) after you die.

    Paul Hudson, co-founder of the International Time Capsule Society, said e-mail time capsules were new to him.

    "Part of the value of time capsules are that they are thought processes in the present," said Hudson, a historian who teaches at Georgia Perimeter College. "You define yourself when you do a time capsule. It might be a good exercise in introspection."

    But sometimes the past is best left behind, said Saffo, who personally finds the whole thing "sad and really weird."

    "The lesson about all these things, it's the lesson from time capsules, is you have to be careful lest you set yourself up for enormous embarrassment in two decades," Saffo said. "Do you really want to be reminded that you thought ABBA was cool?"

    Service providers try to make the delivery process fail-safe through partnerships or back up software, and they urge people to hang on to their e-mail address, but there's no ironclad guarantee that the message will ever arrive.

    Technology changes. Companies go out of business. Spam filters might get in the way.

    Still, that hasn't deterred a sizable number of people from signing up.

    On FutureMe.org, where more than 112,000 messages have been written, many writers are confident enough to make their e-mails though not necessarily their names public.

    "I hope that I've learned to take responsibility for my actions to not be passive aggressive and to not avoid things that are scary for me," one wrote. "I hope I've changed a little."

    "Are you missing an eye? If so, I apologize." wrote another.

    And, of course, the cautious optimist: "Hell, I hope you're still alive."

    https://www.futureme.org/

    [note=saint-michael, you must use quotes if copy and paste from other resources. credits reduce. [/note]

  3. First and foremost, Joomla is a Content Management System (CMS). It is the engine behind your website that simplifies the creation, management, and sharing of content.Goal of Joomla project is to meet most of the requirements highlighted in the above article. As each day in development goes by we are getting nearer and nearer, while at the same time building a solid core which can be extended by third party developers. In the hands of a custom developer, this makes Joomla a powerful platform for a wide variety of Internet applications that go far above and beyond the simple creation of content.I Recommend all you People to Use this latest cms technology and make wonderful sites with all forums, blogs.

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