Ford has abandoned its troubled Microsoft Sync automotive infotainment system for a QNX-based platform that can support Apple's CarPlay with Hands Free Siri. -- For more information read the original article here.
Ahead of the busy holiday shopping season, Apple has made shopping from its online store that much easier. According to a report from Re/Code, Apple's online store for U.S. and U.K. based customers now accepts payment via PayPal. As you can tell fro... -- For more information read the original article here.
A study by research firm ITG suggest that Apple Pay -- introduced only last month -- is already accounting for one percent of all digital payments. The firm also noted that those using Apple Pay increased spending using mobile payments, and tended to use the technology frequently -- resulting in a jump in sales at top merchants that accepted Apple Pay, such as Walgreens, Whole Foods and McDonald's. Each of the three retailers grabbed double-digit shares of the Apple Pay pie....






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With Sony still struggling to recover from having its entire computer system hacked, our sister site TechCrunch recently spoke to a Sony employee about the current state of affairs within the company. Still today, many of Sony's affected internal co... -- For more information read the original article here.

Texas and Alabama have announced they are moving various functions of their state IT operations to Azure Government, Microsoft's government community cloud platform.

Texas recently expanded its Criminal Justice Information Security (CJIS) Addendum to include Azure Government to ensure that law enforcement agencies, which require CJIS agreements, can participate in the move to the Microsoft Cloud for Government.

“Certain workloads don't need to be fully managed or hosted on-premises, and next-generation capabilities allow our customers to access compute on an as-needed basis to meet their specific requirements,” said Dale Richardson, director of Texas Data Center Services.

Meanwhile, Alabama is deploying a hybrid cloud initiative involving Azure Government to host and manage Alabama Medicaid's entire Health Information Exchange and CARES system for multiprogram eligibility and enrollment.

“We're starting off by deploying software in health and human services, where the challenge is speed to market and trying to keep up,” said Brunson White, Alabama's secretary of technology. “Alabama has about 4.8 million people, and over one million are on Medicaid. It's a huge cost. We need the right infrastructure to focus on managing eligibility, enrollment and compliance. It's important that we are able to keep up and deliver excellent services, and equally important that we govern it correctly and make sure that we pay adequate attention to fraud and abuse.”

Moving to the cloud, said White, ensures “we can reduce the cost for the citizens who are paying into the system, and ensure that we're meeting the health and management needs of those who are benefiting from the system.”

Both states announced their cloud initiatives at Microsoft's Government Cloud Summit in Washington, D.C, this week. At the event, the company announced an expanded suite of cloud offerings tailored specifically for government, including Azure Government and CRM.

The firm says Microsoft Cloud for Government services meet or exceed public sector security, privacy and compliance standards and include safeguards such as administrative and physical security measures needed to gain Provisional Authority to Operate by the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) Joint Authorization Board. Integrated services such as compute resources, storage, data, networking and applications are hosted in Microsoft data centers located within the U.S. and managed by cleared U.S. personnel.

Both Texas and Alabama say the fact that Microsoft's cloud solution meets government data privacy requirements was a key factor in their decisions to go with Microsoft Azure.

“The rubber meets the road here, -- For more information read the original article here.

‘It grants the executive branch virtually unlimited access to the communications of every American,' warned Rep. Justin Amash. -- For more information read the original article here.
Democrats say the plan will give millions of students a better education, but Republicans worry about a rising phone "tax." -- For more information read the original article here.
Apple has instituted a new rule for Made for iPhone (MFi) licensing, requiring all cases to protect against drops of at least 1m (3.2 feet) over hard surfaces, sources say. That also includes any orientation, even in the direction of the display. Similarly, cases for all iOS devices must now offer a buffer of at least 1mm between the display and a flat surface when the device is upside-down. To achieve that, they can either cover the display glass completely or use a lip around the edge....






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A fully-functional Apple I original computer known as the "Ricketts Apple I" after the original owner, has sold at auction at Christie's for less than expected, fetching $365,000 rather than the estimated $400,000-600,000 range. The unit was the only known Apple I sold directly by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs to an individual from his Los Altos family home. Another working Apple I was recently sold to the Henry Ford foundation last October for $905,000. While there are thought to be some 50 surviving Apple I units, only six are known to be functional....






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