As a web developer you are spoilt for choice: Which script language should you focus on? Which one suites best for your future projects? Which framework speeds up your development? Furthermore the development of the script language and the framework are often open source projects nowadays. Behind PHP the company Zend is also a key driver. So the question here is: Which open source project is developing best over time? Compared to the established solution PHP, the community around the Rails framework written in the script language Ruby is fast-paced. And Rails promises clear, structured, elegant and above all fast coding. What road to take? Mehr …
We had to wait for some more days after the quad-core Adobe CS3 promotion. But now, the new MacPros are here – and the flagship model is equipped with two – long awaited – quad-core Intel Xeon processors. It looks like Apple is starting to focus on the number of cores and not the number of processors anymore. When the number of cores is increasing only communicating the total number of cores is less confusing for everybody. Sure, there are several technological differences between one quad-core and two dual-core processors – and there is also quite a difference in performance. But Apple already decided to change their communication ![]()
Now, we can be anxious to the benchmarks of the new quad-core Macs. And we probably don’t have to wait too long: The U.K. Apple Store says – ready to ship in 2 days. Quite interesting, that you can get a Mac OS X Server 10-client licence without additional costs. In the US it you still have to pay 499$. A bug or a feature?
Source: store.apple.com/ukstore

Steve Jobs’ open letter, published in February, to push the music industry to DRM-free music, makes a first impact: Today, EMI Music in London announced, that they will offer premium downloads without DRM (digital rights management) and with better encoding quality within the iTunes store. Single premium downloads (256 kbps encoded ACC without digital right management) will cost $1.29/€1.29/£0.99. Purchased songs can be upgraded for $0.30/€0.30/£0.20 per track. Eric Nicoli, CEO of EMI Group and Apple’s CEO Steve Jobs presented the new concept in London, today.
It’s interesting, that the price for complete albums will not be changed for the premium version. The music industry tries to season their complete albums.
Basically, this is a real improvement on the consumer side. Until now, all "early adopters" have been punished with all these DRM-restrictions. And on the other side: the good old CD, without copy protection, with printed cover, with better quality and with an "integrated backup feature"
. Let’s not talk about the hacker attacks from Sony’s "copy-protection" root kits. It would be a real step forward, if the honest customers, who buy their music legally, will not be punished for that.
Sources: apple.com, wikipedia.org, source & picture: emigroup.com