Friday, 11 March 2016

OneNote tries to draw in Evernote users with a new migration tool

PCWorld Show Episode 7: Microsoft's walled PC gaming garden, Yelp for people, Opera ad blocking

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Top Stories @PCWorld

Mar 11, 2016
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OneNote tries to draw in Evernote users with a new migration tool

Microsoft is trying to lure users away from Evernote with a new tool that lets people migrate their notes from the startup's note-taking service. Read More

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Your Must-Read Stories

PCWorld Show Episode 7: Microsoft's walled PC gaming garden, Yelp for people, Opera ad blocking
Rise of the Tomb Raider patch adds DirectX 12, fancy new Nvidia VXAO tech
Need machine learning? HPE just launched a new service with more than 60 APIs
New movies at home on launch day: Is avoiding the theater worth $50 per film?
Intel's blisteringly fast Optane SSD tech will be compatible with MacBooks
Asus reveals two tiny, unique GTX 950 graphics cards that don't need extra power
Justice Department slams Apple's 'corrosive' rhetoric in its latest court filing
New Microsoft Edge extensions may have a ripple effect on Windows gaming
Google's delightful Chrome Music Lab is designed for kids like you
Epic's Tim Sweeney takes another stab at Windows 10's walled garden
Emergency Flash Player patch fixes actively exploited vulnerability
Retro Tech: Exploring the TI-99/4A
Two-year-old Java flaw re-emerges due to broken patch
Kicked out of PCs, Blu-ray drives are revived in data centers
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PCWorld Show Episode 7: Microsoft's walled PC gaming garden, Yelp for people, Opera ad blocking

Jon, Mark and Gordon discuss the hottest tech topics of the week. Read More

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Rise of the Tomb Raider patch adds DirectX 12, fancy new Nvidia VXAO tech

Nvidia sneaks VXAO lighting tech into Rise of the Tomb Raider's DirectX 12 PC patch. Read More

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Need machine learning? HPE just launched a new service with more than 60 APIs

If 2015 was the year analytics tools became ubiquitous in enterprise software, 2016 is shaping up to do much the same for machine learning. Read More

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New movies at home on launch day: Is avoiding the theater worth $50 per film?

Screening Room looks to bring first-run movies straight to the living room, but at a high price. Read More

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Intel's blisteringly fast Optane SSD tech will be compatible with MacBooks

Intel's been quiet about its super-fast Optane memory and SSD products, but few emerging details may provide insight into how they could be used in products like Apple's MacBooks. Read More

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Asus reveals two tiny, unique GTX 950 graphics cards that don't need extra power

If you need a new graphics card for your HTPC or want to beef up your prebuilt PC, take a look at these two cards that don't require power from a PCIe connector. Read More

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Justice Department slams Apple's 'corrosive' rhetoric in its latest court filing

The DOJ accuses Apple of a "technological fiat" for resisting a court order to brute-force the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone. Read More

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New Microsoft Edge extensions may have a ripple effect on Windows gaming

Extensions may not be the feature that lures users to Microsoft's Edge browser. But extending Universal Windows Apps in general has promising implications for the openness of the Windows platform. Read More

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Google's delightful Chrome Music Lab is designed for kids like you

Google has struck a chord with its enthralling new Chrome Music Lab, a number of in-browser experiments featuring sound. Read More

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Epic's Tim Sweeney takes another stab at Windows 10's walled garden

Epic head Tim Sweeney returns with a more substantial take on how to keep Windows open. Read More

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Emergency Flash Player patch fixes actively exploited vulnerability

Adobe Systems released new versions of Flash Player in order to fix 18 critical vulnerabilities that can be exploited to take over computers, including one flaw that's already targeted by attackers. Read More

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Retro Tech: Exploring the TI-99/4A

Texas Instruments' classic home computer from the late 1970s and early '80s goes under the knife for science. Read More

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Two-year-old Java flaw re-emerges due to broken patch

A two-year-old vulnerability in Java can still be exploited in the latest versions because the patch for it is ineffective, security researchers have found. Read More

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Kicked out of PCs, Blu-ray drives are revived in data centers

Blu-ray and DVD drives are being kicked out of PCs, and finding a new life in data centers as storage that can retain data for up to 100 years. Read More

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