| IT News Daily | | | These days, keeping up with games can be a full-time job. So how do you separate the signal from the noise, the wheat from the chaff, the Temple Runs from the Temple Jumps? Allow us to help by regularly selecting a game You Should Play. | | | Issue highlights 1. Keep your kids entertained over the holiday break with these 4 apps 2. The first 10 apps to install on your brand-new Mac 3. Connected, self-driving cars in the front seat at CES 4. MIT unifies Web development in a single, speedy new language 5. Google, Microsoft, Sony make 'The Interview' available online 6. Experts: FCC will adopt net neutrality rules in early 2015 | | | It's practically guaranteed to happen: Sometime during Winter Break or a drawn-out family holiday gathering, your kids are going to get bored and ask if they can play with your iPhone or iPad. But you don't want them to spend their alone-time with your precious device making pricey in-app purchases or "playing around" in your work email, and you probably also don't want them to spend six hours ignoring Grandma to play Candy Crush. READ MORE | | It used to be all the rage to photograph in excruciating detail the "unboxing" of a new piece of gear, especially hardware that few people (or no one else) yet had. Unboxing was great, but it's sort of like a wedding or a birth: The actual event is relatively brief, and the really important stuff comes afterwards, as you spend years together. READ MORE | | WHITE PAPER: VMTurbo, Inc. Read this whitepaper for these 3 takeaways: The complexities of pursuing efficient capacity planning How to define functional requirements for your capacity management strategy A capacity management strategy that assures service levels while reducing performance risk and hardware footprint Learn More>> | | Cars that can park themselves, cycle helmets that can communicate to avoid collisions and the coming battle between Apple's CarPlay and Google's Android Auto will all be hot topics at International CES in January. READ MORE | | Building a moderately complex Web page requires understanding a whole stack of technologies, from HTML to JavaScript. Now a researcher from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has wrapped these technologies into a single language that could streamline development, speed up performance and better secure Web sites. READ MORE | | RESOURCE COMPLIMENTS OF: IDG TV Watch all the latest videos from IDG's global network of technology experts, all teed up in searchable channels with a fun, fresh look. Click to continue | | The controversial movie "The Interview" is now available online through Google and Microsoft services as well as a Sony Pictures website, the companies announced separately on Wednesday. READ MORE | | The U.S. Federal Communications Commission will adopt net neutrality rules in early 2015, maybe as soon as February, several observers believe, but few people want to predict what those rules will look like. READ MORE | | | | |
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