News from ZDNet | | Is sitting all day while computing slowly killing us? Add a standing desk, a better chair, or a break, to live longer Read more | Why the first true post-PC era device isn't the iPad. It's the Chromebook. You can't claim to be post-PC if you can't start using the thing without a PC (or a Mac). Read more | Google aims to bridge Android, cloud computing with robotics Google launched rosjava, a ROS (robot OS) framework in Java that is Android compatible. The plan: Meld Android, cloud computing and robotics. Read more | Samsung to unveil 10.1-inch tablet display with 2,560x1,600 resolution Apple has touted its Retina Display tech for its latest iPhone, but it hasn't brought it to the iPad -- yet. Samsung is ready to show off a new tablet-size LCD that has the resolution necessary to... Read more | Verizon issues HTC ThunderBolt software update Verizon and HTC are rolling out a software update for the HTC ThunderBolt that looks to have a long list of updates. Hopefully, it fixes my WiFi hotspot issues. Read more | Original Galaxy Tab getting Gingerbread in Europe, U.S. waiting game begins Samsung has produced a Gingerbread update for the original 7-inch Galaxy Tab in several countries in Europe. As usual, owners in the U.S. are in a wait-and-see mode for the update. Read more | Chromebooks: Will Google repeat the mistakes of its cell phone debacle? Google stopped selling its Nexus 1 cellphone six months after launch. Has Google learned its lessons or is it repeating the same mistakes with Chromebooks? Read more | 'Tech-injunction' gags Twitter, Facebook users: Why super-injunctions only apply to Britain An injunction has directly prevented the spread of disclosure to Facebook and Twitter. Why is the US unphased by 'super-injunction society', and how to citizen journalists fit in? Read more | Fujitsu introduces the TH Series, a Windows 7 slider Fujitsu has announced a Windows 7 hybrid with a sliding keyboard is going on sale in Japan. The TH Series tablet is a 10.1-inch multitouch slate with a full keyboard that slides out when needed. Read more | Can't put solar on your roof? Try your parking lot One key to adoption of alternative energy technologies not only is how easy the technology is to install, but also how easy it is to finance. American Clean Energy, a New Jersey company that... Read more | One more reason not to travel: super-bedbugs As a nurse, I'm concerned about a far more serious malady that's just turned from bad to the holy-cow-that's-super-bad kind of worse. Read more | How social media and big data will unleash what we know Today social media generates more information in a short period of time than was previously available in the entire world a few generations ago. Making sense of it and understanding what it means... Read more | Good to Go #10 with Noah and James: Google I/O and LTE saves the day Noah Kravitz of TechnoBuffalo and James Kendrick of ZDNet present Good to Go: a weekly video show covering the hot topics of the day. We battled flickering lights and no connectivity for today's... Read more | Facebook: we did not authorize anti-Google campaign Facebook has admitted to hiring the PR firm that asked news outlets to look into privacy issues with Google but denies that it authorized a smear campaign. Read more | Netflix comes to random group of Android smartphones Android users have been asking for Netflix on their smartphones and it appears to be rolling out now to selected handsets. There doesn't seem to be much rhyme or reason to the selected devices. Read more | |  |  | About this newsletter | The Tech Sanity Check newsletter is my daily update on the world of technology. You'll get my opinions, reviews, user polls, and hand-picked stories of the day. Jason Hiner TechRepublic Editor in Chief
|  | | For real-time updates on the latest tech stories, follow: My Twitter feed: @jasonhiner My Facebook page (click Like) | On triathlons and IT management Patrick Gray has been considering the similarities between training for a triathlon and effective, strategic IT management and discovered there are a surprising number of parallels. | | |
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