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Street View Snowmobile Gives Vantage From Olympic Mountain (Sadly Not Mount Olympus)

Admittedly, we're not exactly thrilled about the upcoming 2010 Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver. We don't even understand the rules of half the events. But leave it to Google to make the games (or at least the location) a little more exciting.

To do this, some enterprising engineers and camera operators are taking Google Street View to new heights -- literally. According to the Official Google Blog, you can now view shots from vantage points in the Whistler Blackcomb mountains -- some of them as high as 7,000 feet. The Street View team rigged a camera to a snowmobile and zipped around many of the runs that will host Olympic events -- like the Dave Murray downhill slope. These really are some breathtaking shots, and shots that many of us would never see if it weren't for Street View. Plus, Google captured some new aerial images of the Vancouver-Whistler area.

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'AcneApp' Claims to Incinerate Zits While You Talk, Teens Rejoice

For every iPhone app that actually serves a worthwhile purpose (even if that purpose is only to amuse the user), there are hundreds of useless offerings that are only meant to dupe unwitting shoppers. Technology has also given rise to an influx of "snakeoil" gadgets that weasel money out of gullible consumers with false promises.

Dr. Greg Pearson has devised an iPhone app that, upon first inspection, definitely appears to tap into both of those dubious sales practices. His new 'AcneApp', which costs $1.99, apparently prevents pimples and reverses aging by bombarding the user's face with red and blue light. The blue light supposedly kills bacteria and the red light apparently acts as an anti-inflammatory so that purchasers can "treat their acne while talking on the phone."

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Courts to Jurors: Please Stop Tweeting, For Realz

So, we don't even know where to start with this one. It seems as though jurors serving on active court cases are tweeting details about the trials. Really? Yes.

The Judicial Conference of the United States, which frames policy for federal courts, issued an updated set of model jury instructions late last month to explicitly prohibit sharing and researching trial information through the Internet. This does not apply to state courts, which govern their own judiciaries. But the fact that Florida recently barred lawyers and judges from becoming Facebook friends (a conflict of interest of epic proportions) indicates that the states have just as much trouble keeping the courtroom off of the Web.

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ChatRoulette Makes the Internet Seem New Again...and Creepier Than Ever

Remember back when you got your first dial-up connection and the thrill of exploring the new and wild online jungle? It's okay, we can't either. But a new site, ChatRoulette, manages to revive that greenhorn spirit... at the expense of some seriously creepy voyeurism.

In a fascinating article for New York Magazine, Sam Anderson documents his own ride through ChatRoulette, a site straight out of 'Infinite Jest' that allows users to vid chat with a random selection of "strangers." Most interactions last mere seconds, and the male-to-female ratio is scarily imbalanced. A great deal of the experiences, of course, are bizarre, perverted, and downright depressing. A few, though, end up being strangely enjoyable, even if they last only a few, fleeting seconds -- a dancing old man here, a card trick there, and, of course, the occasional meaningful conversation. Think of it like speed dating, or speed meeting, for the ADD-addled generation.

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Google Launches Buzz, Targets Twitter and Facebook

Google just announced Google Buzz, a new system for sharing updates, shared info, and media both privately and publicly. Buzz, an online social system similar to Facebook and Twitter, seems to be fully integrated into many of Google's services; you'll be able to access it via Gmail, Google's redesigned mobile homepage, a new dedicated Buzz app, and an updated version of the Google Maps app.

Although Gmail integration seems to be the core of the product, Buzz distinguishes itself from Twitter and Facebook with its strong focus on location. All of these updated Google mobile apps will offer ways to share your media and location via GPS, a capability that, Google claims, will cut through the clutter so prevalent on sites like Facebook and Twitter.

Gallery: Google Buzz

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Hacker Cracks Security Chip Known as 'Digital Fort Knox'

Hacker Christopher Tarnovsky has accomplished what many thought was nearly impossible: cracking the Trusted Platform Module (TPM). Described by some as a "digital Fort Knox," the TPM is a specialized processor dedicated to encrypting data and keeping sensitive information from prying eyes. The chips, found in many PCs, are an important line of defense for businesses and governments who need to ...

Design Concepts: Enliven Valentine's With Imaginative, Intimate Devices

The Web is teeming with the unrealized ideas of both students and established designers who set out to produce astonishing renderings and prototypes for unusual products. Unfortunately, due to the lack of time, money, or technology, many of those products never progress from the planning stages to the mass market. But that doesn't mean we can't salivate over them, nevertheless. In honor of ...

David Lynch to Text You Movies, 'Madden' Coming to Facebook

Highlights from this morning's other big tech headlines.... The Mogreet mobile video firm focuses on MMS, particularly the development of text messaging and the incorporation of phone-to-phone video sharing. The company has now drafted Hollywood icon David Lynch to help share its new technology, as it has introduced a texting program through which subscribers can receive exclusive David ...

Google Gets Glam With a Makeover From Fashion's Brightest

A good designer can find inspiration in anything. Similarly, a good search engine can be used to find everything.Yet, beware of Google, good readers. While the super-company has conquered all things virtual from e-mail to maps, the world of high fashion is a tough one to master. Teaming up with the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund (which basically picks and chooses, based on talent, hype and creativity, ...

Nickelback Vs. a Pickle: Latest Facebook Meme Asks the Tough Questions

Share Because these are the kinds of things that curious minds ponder, we're sure you've spent many a wee hour asking yourself if Nickelback sucks and how they could've ever accrued over 1 million fans on Facebook. That's twice the size of Boston, for Scott Stapp's sake! Well, the citizens of Facebook have heard your cry of confusion, and they've devised a brand new meme to finally answer the ...
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