The Round-up: Phishing for Xbox, Myspace Tom and The Minority Report
This week has been huge, so it's warranted the welcome return of the round-up: putting everything that happened last week on one page for you to digest. We've had everything from The Sun, 7-inch tablets and Myspace Tom to HMV On Demand, William Shatner and a rocket launch. Even a tricky question is answered: what happens online when you die? So let's get started.
Monday
BBC leaks external prototype of responsive news page
GameMaker challenge at University of Lincoln (free games to download here, which are pretty awesome)
Modern Warfare 3 graphics comparison. Xbox 360 vs Wii
EA Face Law Suit for Battlefield 1943 omission. Should Warner Bros. face similar treatment?
Tuesday
Xbox Live Phishing Scam front page news
Rumour: iPad 3 is smaller, production to start in January
Facebook shaves a couple off the six degrees of separation
Wednesday
WHSmith releases 7-inch Android colour tablet
There's no better way get over being unfriended on Facebook than with William Shatner
The Humble Introversion Bundle out today
Google denies reports that Google+ is dying
Bionic contact lenses to give us augmented reality eyeballs
Thursday
Guy accuses Myspace Tom of being the Father to his Girlfriend's baby
The Sun now claims denied hacking is an "Xbox fraud cover-up" (in response to Tuesday's Phishing story)
HMV joins The Digital Age with On-Demand service. Are they too late?
The DisplAir: That awesome computer from Minority report, only real
What happens online when you die?
Friday
Two versions of the next generation Xbox planned
Modular USB flash drive concept. An ingenious way to sort out your data
Tesco comes up Trumps with Modern Warfare 3's best ad yet
U.S. Senator asks Google to add a terrorist flagging button to blogger
Saturday
Google+ reunites DSLR with owner after a year at the bottom of the ocean
The DIY 'Privacy Monitor:' hide porn in plain sight
Government releases 'The UK Cyber Security Strategy'
NASA's Mars Rover Curiosity successfully launches
Sunday
Siri protocol hacks: start your car and control your house
Martin says its jetpack is practical. Proven with poorly rendered animation