Kyt Dotson

Kyt Dotson is a Senior Editor at SiliconAngle and works to cover beats surrounding DevOps, security, gaming, and cutting edge technology. Before joining SiliconAngle, Kyt worked as a software engineer starting at Motorola in Q&A to eventually settle at Pets911.com where he helped build a vast database for pet adoption and a lost and found system. Kyt is a published author who writes science fiction and fantasy works that incorporate ideas from modern-day technological innovation and explore the outcome of living with those technologies.

Latest from Kyt Dotson

LimeWire Closes Its Online Store, Gone by Dec 31st

It looks like the long winded LimeWire saga is coming to a close with the shuttering of its online store. According to All Things D, notices posted on its website now tell the story of its closure by December 31, 2010. The company is also closing its online music store at the end of the ...

Zynga Angling for More Mobile Presence with Newtoy Acquisition

The online game publisher Zynga has been in the news a lot lately with seven acquisitions in as many months. They already dominate the landscape of Facebook and a lot of online social and casual gaming and are looking to press their way further into the mobile market. The newly acquired company, Texas-based Newtoy, produces ...

Google Improving Copyright Protection Basics

Google is upgrading their procedures for the submission of Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notices against copyright infringing materials on their services and also the procedures for filing counter notices. The dreaded DMCA notice is a common event on YouTUBE, especially for new users making music videos by compiling together popular music and clips from ...

eBay Purchasing Milo.com for $75 Million

An article running right now in Business Insider lays out the news that eBay has acquired Milo.com for $75 million and cites two anonymous sources, Milo.com is a shopping search engine that lets you find out what’s in stock at local stores. How does Milo fit with eBay? For starters, it plays in the same ...

Xbox 360 Kinect Sensor Sales Booming, Exceeded 2.5 Million

Not just popular for the homebrew front, Kinect has hit the heart of gamer households to the tune of 2.5 million units sold since its release only 27 days ago. It’s already seen its share of controversial press, some homebrew hacking to do fun stuff (even shadow puppets!) but that’s not the only market that ...

Verizon Launching “4G” Network December 7th

We’ve been hearing about this for a while now, but no solid dates have fallen out of Verizon’s plans to roll out their Long-Term Evolution (LTE) technology infrastructure and put their customers on 4G. Well, here it is: it’s coming December 7th, 2010. According to an article running on CNET, the carrier plans to unveil ...

Want 3D Processing? Oliver Kreylos Shows Two Kinects are Better than One

When last we checked in on Oliver Kreylos he was hacking a single Xbox 360 Kinect device to produce fairly cool 3D streaming visuals. Now, he’s gone a step further and tied the feeds of two Kinect cameras together to give his creation stereoscopic vision. This is the same way how humans perceive depth, with ...

Groupon Buys Ludic Labs, Ponders $6 billion Google Bid

Groupon’s board of directors is meeting today to mull over a $6 billion buyout bid from Google for their crowd sourced coupon service. While waiting, Groupon has decided to make an acquisition of their own; paidContent.org has some coverage of what’s going on, but entire situation is still spotty. They have snapped up Ludic Labs, ...

FCC Votes to Break Open Under-Utilized Television Spectrum for Internet, Mobile

In a 5-0 vote yesterday the Federal Communications Commission made notice of a proposed policy that will lead the way to opening up the broadcast TV spectrum. With the advent of digital TV, much of what analog television broadcasts took up in spectrum is now easier to reach. This decision comes in a long chain ...

FCC Pushes for Information on Comcast-Level 3 Dispute

Cable giant Comcast has locked horns with fiber-based communication services Level 3 Communications over streaming movies over its networks. While Level 3 hasn’t filed a formal complaint with the FCC, enough has happened in the dispute to catch their attention so the administration is looking into the matter. The initial foray will be to uncover ...