It’s Probably a Good Time to Change Your Terrible WordPress Password

“PSA of the day: Don’t use obvious usernames and passwords — like “username” and “password” — for your blog. For one thing, it’s just dumb. It makes it easier for anyone to make a guess and take your account for a spin.”

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Developers Get Access to Official Pebble Watchface SDK

“This developer documentation will show you how to create your own functionality for a Pebble Smartwatch.”

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Verizon unveils 1 year “Device Payment Plan” for yearly updaters, moves full subsidies to 24 months

“Verizon announced they’ll be changing things up a bit, possibly in response to T-Mobile’s new ‘Uncarrier’ pricing structure.”

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How to uninstall Facebook Home from your Android smartphone

“We walk through how to remove and uninstall Facebook Home from your current Android smartphone. At launch, Facebook Home is available on the HTC One X, HTC O…”

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Verizon pushes upgrade cycle to a full 24 months

“If you’re waiting for an upgrade credit from Verizon, you may have to wait a little bit longer. The carrier announced today it would now be offering discounts only after customers complete a full 24 months on their contract, extended from 20 months.”

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Pebble Watchface SDK Now Available, Let’s See What This Smart Watch Can Do

“Pebble has officially released its SDK, after promising to deliver it during the second week of April. This qualifies, if only just, and arrives alongside firmware update version 1.1 for PebbleOS.”

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Verizon moves to longer and stricter upgrade times | Android Central

Verizon makes upgrade periods longer and upgrade sharing more restricted.

How Google Fiber Could Do Some National Good, Or At Least Scare the Carriers

Nerval’s Lobster writes “Within hours of Google announcing that Austin, Texas would be the next lucky recipient of its Google Fiber initiative, AT&T released a statement indicating that it was willing to build a high-speed broadband network in the city, too. ‘AT&T announced that in conjunction with its previously announced Project VIP expansion of broadband access, it is prepared to build an advanced fiber optic infrastructure in Austin, Texas, capable of delivering speeds up to 1 gigabit per second,’ read the statement. But there’s a not-so-slight catch: AT&T wants whatever conditions Google received from the city of Austin. Google itself has provided precious little guidance about its future plans. ‘We are still in the very early stages of it,’ Google CEO Larry Page told media and analysts during the company’s Jan. 22 earnings call, according to a transcript. ‘Obviously, we are going to a small number of people and so, but we are excited about the possibilities.’ But if Google Fiber keeps expanding, it could compel AT&T and other infrastructure providers to boost their broadband service and offer it on more reasonable terms — nothing like some competition to make things a little better for the collective customer base. In that sense, even if Google Fiber doesn’t expand into a national program (and imagine the costs of that), its existence will still do some larger good.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

via Slashdot http://tech.slashdot.org/story/13/04/10/2130254/how-google-fiber-could-do-some-national-good-or-at-least-scare-the-carriers?utm_source=rss1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed

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