Apple objects to German cafe trademark

In another trademark dispute, Apple is up in arms about the logo used by a Bonn cafe with a (fruity) apple theme.
 

ROSAT crashes over Bay of Bengal

Officials with the German Aerospace Center stated that its ROSAT satellite crashed into the Bay of Bengal on Saturday, October 22, 2011.
 

Where oh where did the satellite crash?

The defunct German satellite ROSAT came plunging back to Earth early on Sunday, October 23, 2011, but we’re not really sure where pieces of it landed after surviving its dramatic descent through Earth's atmosphere.
 

ROSAT satellite to come crashing down

It’s time to put on your anti-satellite helmets again, as the German-built ROSAT satellite readies itself for a crash back to Earth somewhere between October 21 and 25, 2011.
 

Myki: The mess that keeps on messing (updated)

1.1 million Myki cards will be replaced in response to the announcement that they can be cloned.
 

German Governments admit spyware was theirs

During the past 24 hours, as many as four German state governments have admitted to using spyware against their citizens.
 

Chaos Computer Club 'outs' German Government's spyware

Claiming the usual "it arrived in an anonymous brown paper bag," the Chaos Computer Club has announced the reverse engineering of what is claimed to be the German authorities' intercept malware, Quellen-TKÜ.
 

UARS is down, but ROSAT coming down, too!

NASA’s UARS satellite fell to Earth early Saturday morning somewhere over the Pacific Ocean. But, Germany’s ROSAST satellite is getting ready to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere and come crashing to Earth. It’s due back in October-November 2011.
 

Ze Germans haf banned ze Samsung Galaxy 10.1: Nein!

Neeeeiiiiiin! Ze Germans haf banned ze Galaxy in ze country of Germany und ze rest of ze European Union except for ze Nezzerlands, und Samsung ist very annoyed while Apple ist happien. Achtung!
 

NICTA teams with German security company

A strategic collaboration between Australian and German companies is aimed at the development of high-security devices for use by defence and government customers.