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  Science: Tooth Regeneration Coming Soon on Monday January 05, @08:12PM

Posted by kdawson on Monday January 05, @08:12PM
from the no-fairy-tale dept.
Medicine
Ponca City, We love you writes "For thousands of years, losing teeth has been a routine part of human aging. Now the Washington Post reports that researchers are close to growing important parts of teeth from stem cells, including creating a living root from scratch, perhaps within one year. According to Pamela Robey of the NIH. 'Dentists say, "Give me a root and I can put a crown on it."' In a few years dentists will treat periodontal disease with regeneration by using stem cells to create hard and soft tissue; they will take out a tooth that is about to fall, and reconnect it firmly to the regenerated tissue. Although nobody is predicting when it will be possible to grow teeth on demand, in adults, to replace missing ones, a common guess is five to ten years. Baby and wisdom teeth are sources of stem cells that could be 'banked' for future health needs, says Robey. 'When you think about it, the teeth children put under their pillows may end up being worth much more than the tooth fairy's going rate. Plus, if you still have your wisdom teeth, it's nice to know you're walking around with your own source of stem cells.'"
science medicine jaws what
science medicine
story
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Comments: 13
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  Technology: Amazon S3 Adds Option To Make Data Accessors Pay on Monday January 05, @07:17PM

Posted by kdawson on Monday January 05, @07:17PM
from the by-the-byte dept.
Software
CWmike writes "Amazon.com has rolled out a new option for its Simple Storage Service (S3) that lets data owners shift the cost of accessing their information to users. Until now, individuals or businesses with information stored on S3 had to pay data-transfer costs to Amazon when others made use of the information. Amazon said the new Requester Pays option relieves data providers of that burden, leaving them to pay only the basic storage fees for the cloud computing service. The bigger question with the cloud is, who really pays? Mark Everett Hall argues that IT workers do."
internet software stopsayingcloud itsintheclouds amazon
tech software
story
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Comments: 22
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  Science: Carefully Timed Jerks Could Power Space Elevator on Monday January 05, @06:22PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @06:22PM
from the pull-harder-and-faster dept.
Space
Hugh Pickens writes "BBC has an interesting article on the long-standing issue of how to power the 'climber' that would ascend a space elevator into space. Previous ideas have included delivering microwave or laser power to the climber beamed from the Earth's surface, but now European Space Agency ground station engineer Age-Raymond Riise has demonstrated a device that could provide a "lift into space" for cheaper space missions along a 100,000-km long tether anchored to the Earth. Riise demonstrated sending power mechanically by providing carefully timed jerks of the cable at its base with a broomstick to represent the cable held in tension, an electric sander to provide a rhythmic vibration to the bottom of the stick, and three brushes representing the climber with their bristles pointing downwards allowing the climber assembly to slide upward along the broomstick as it moved slightly downward, but grip it as it moved slightly upward. 'It would be possible to make a suspension system that completely decouples the cabin where the passengers are,' says Riise. 'For them it would be a linear movement with very little disturbance.' Riise says that he has been approached by commercial elevator companies, who are researching new ideas for elevators in superscrapers where the simplicity of the approach makes it attractive when compared to other ideas for powering lifts, such as compressed air."
transportation space jerk !assholes jerkit
science space
story
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Comments: 120
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  IT: Employees the Next (Continuing) Big Security Risk? on Monday January 05, @05:30PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @05:30PM
from the not-if-you-treat-them-right dept.
Security
surely_you_cant_be_serious writes "A nationwide survey finds that most companies consider their systems vulnerable to attack. Historically, crime rates increase during recessions — and some believe that cybercrime may well follow suit, especially given massive layoffs and the dim prospects many laid-off employees face in finding a new job. 'One thing companies can start doing is monitoring their networks on an ongoing basis so that they understand the normal pattern of data flow and usage, Brill said. In many cases, companies may not have the internal capability to do this, but outsourcing options are available. Kroll Ontrack, for instance, will be rolling out a 24/7 monitoring service for its global clients manned from a US location by professionals in early 2009.'"
security it notnews !news slashvertisement
it security
story
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Comments: 51
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  IT: A Hacker's Audacious Plan To Rule the Underground on Monday January 05, @04:47PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @04:47PM
from the ambition-can-carry-you-just-so-far dept.
Security
An anonymous reader writes "Wired has the inside story of Max Butler, a former white hat hacker who joined the underground following a jail stint for hacking the Pentagon. His most ambitious hack was a hostile takeover of the major underground carding boards where stolen credit card and identity data are bought and sold. The attack made his own site, CardersMarket, the largest crime forum in the world, with 6,000 users. But it also made the feds determined to catch him, since one of the sites he hacked, DarkMarket.ws, was secretly a sting operation run by the FBI."
internet security !snory syndrome dorkmarket
it security
story
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Comments: 154
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  Hardware: Distributed "Nuclear Batteries" the New Infrastructure Answer? on Monday January 05, @03:59PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @03:59PM
from the not-in-my-backyard dept.
Power
thepacketmaster writes "The Star reports about a new power generation model using smaller distributed power generators located closer to the consumer. This saves money on power generation lines and creates an infrastructure that can be more easily expanded with smaller incremental steps, compared to bigger centralized power generation projects. The generators in line for this are green sources, but Hyperion Power Generation, NuScale, Adams Atomic Engines (and some other companies) are offering small nuclear reactors to plug into this type of infrastructure. The generator from Hyperion is about the size of a garden shed, and uses older technology that is not capable of creating nuclear warheads, and supposedly self-regulating so it won't go critical. They envision burying reactors near the consumers for 5-10 years, digging them back up and recycling them. Since they are so low maintenance and self-contained, they are calling them nuclear batteries."
power technology notquiteshipstone whatcouldpossiblygowrong fallout
hardware power
story
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Comments: 352
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  Technology: ESA Embraces Open Source With New SAR Toolbox on Monday January 05, @03:07PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @03:07PM
from the other-applications dept.
Software
phyr writes "The European Space Agency (ESA) has released its Next ESA SAR Toolbox (NEST) freely as GPL for Linux and Windows. It provides an integrated viewer for reading, calibrating, post-processing and analysis of ESA (ERS 1&2, ENVISAT) and 3rd party (Radarsat2, TerraSarX, Alos Palsar, JERS) SAR level 1 data and higher. ESA has chosen to distribute the software as fully open source to allow the remote sensing community to easily develop new readers/writers and post-processors for SAR data with their NEST Java API. The software provides both a command line interface and GUI for all features including data conversion, graph processing, coregistration, multilooking, filtering, and band arithmetic."
software science !whatnomacosx sars yourtaxesatwork
tech software
story
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Comments: 52
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Screenshot-sm   Book Reviews: Ubuntu Kung Fu on Monday January 05, @02:13PM

Posted by samzenpus on Monday January 05, @02:13PM
from the read-all-about-it dept.
Image
Lorin Ricker writes "Back in the dark ages of windows-based GUIs, corresponding to my own wandering VMS evangelical days, I became enamored of a series of books jauntily entitled Xxx Annoyances (from O'Reilly & Assocs.), where "Xxx" could be anything from "Windows 95", "Word", "Excel" or nearly piece of software which Microsoft produced. These were, if not the first, certainly among the most successful of the "tips & tricks" books that have become popular and useful to scads of hobbyists, ordinary users, hackers and, yes, even professionals in various IT pursuits. I was attracted, even a bit addicted, to these if only because they offered to try to make some useful sense out of the bewildering design choices, deficiencies and bugs that I'd find rampant in Windows and its application repertory. Then I found Keir Thomas, who has been writing about Linux for more than a decade. His new "tips" book entitled, Ubuntu Kung Fu — Tips & Tools for Exploring Using, and Tuning Linux, and published by Pragmatic Bookshelf, is wonderful. Having only recently wandered into the light of Linux, open source software, and Ubuntu in particular, this book comes as a welcome infusion to my addiction." Read below for the rest of Lorin's review.
software books !panda lame typoinsummary
books software
story
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Comments: 178
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  Science: New Method To Revolutionize DNA Sequencing on Monday January 05, @01:22PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @01:22PM
from the start-saving-up-to-buy-a-clone dept.
Biotech
Anonymous Coward writes "A new method of DNA sequencing published this week in science identifies incorporation of single bases by fluorescence. This has been shown to increase read lengths from 20 bases (454 sequencing) to >4000 bases, with a 99.3% accuracy. Single molecule reading can reduce costs and increase the rate at which reads can be performed. 'So far, the team has built a chip housing 3000 ZMWs [waveguides], which the company hopes will hit the market in 2010. By 2013, it aims to squeeze a million ZMWs [waveguides] onto a single chip and observe DNA being assembled in each simultaneously. Company founder Stephen Turner estimates that such a chip would be able to sequence an entire human genome in under half an hour to 99.999 per cent accuracy for under $1000.'"
biotech science slashdotted biotch gattaca
science biotech
story
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Comments: 196
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  Technology: LG High-Def TVs To Stream Netflix Videos on Monday January 05, @12:29PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 05, @12:29PM
from the moving-closer-to-real-on-demand dept.
Television
DJAdapt writes to tell us that LG has launched a new line of high definition TVs that will be capable of streaming Netflix videos with no additional hardware. This is just another in a long line of expansions from the once DVD rental service, which has expanded to the Roku set top box, Xbox 360, PC, Mac, and Linux platforms recently. "Piping movies directly to TV sets is the natural evolution of the video streaming service, said Reed Hastings, the chief executive of Netflix. "The TV symbolizes the ultimate destination," he said. That idea -- shared by Sony Corp., which already streams feature films and TV shows directly to its Bravia televisions -- is still in its early stages. Netflix's streaming service taps a library of 12,000 titles, while the company's DVD menu numbers more than 100,000 titles. Hastings expects that gap will "definitely narrow" over time, but he noted that DVDs maintain an advantage over streaming, which is that "they are very profitable" for film studios."
tv technology netflix badsummary tech
tech tv
story
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Comments: 166
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  Technology: Do Twitter Phishing Scams Herald the End of Microblogs? on Monday January 05, @11:36AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday January 05, @11:36AM
from the sure-why-not dept.
The Internet
An anonymous reader writes "Twitter's been hit by a big phishing scam. Culture Crash blogger Dan Tynan says this is the end Twitter's innocence. Will tweets become like email, with two out of every three just worthless spam?"
internet security burmashave itsalreadyworthless teatempestpot
tech internet
story
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Comments: 250
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  Microsoft Rumored To Lay Off Thousands Worldwide on Monday January 05, @10:47AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday January 05, @10:47AM
from the that's-not-good dept.
Microsoft
nandemoari writes "It seems not even Microsoft is impervious to the effects of this increasingly painful recession. According to reports, the Redmond-based company is preparing to lay off about 17 per cent of its entire workforce in the coming months. Despite its portfolio diversity — including operating systems, antivirus software, and video game consoles — Microsoft is clearly feeling the pressure applied by a tightening global economy. In fact, there seems to be a sense of emergency to the massive cuts (about 15,000 workers out of 90,000), which rumors suggest should be made official by January 15."
microsoft !surprise schadenfreude tehsuck rumor
microsoft
story
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Comments: 406
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  Apple: Steve Jobs Issues Update On His Health on Monday January 05, @09:48AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday January 05, @09:48AM
from the can't-believe-this-is-news dept.
Technology (Apple)
i4u writes "Rumors about Steve Jobs' health have been flying high again after Apple announced that he will not be holding the keynote at the Macworld 2009. Today Steve Jobs issued a letter with a rather personal update on why he was losing weight in 2008. The reason for losing weight in 2008 is a hormone imbalance that has been reducing proteins. The remedy for this nutritional problem is relatively simple and straightforward according to Jobs. Steve and his doctors predict that he will have normal weight again by Spring. So stop the rumors and enjoy Macworld 2009."
apple cancer aids lies hormones
apple apple
story
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Comments: 266
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  Apple: Review of 'MacHeads' Documentary on Monday January 05, @08:59AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday January 05, @08:59AM
from the just-in-time-for-macworld-zomg-zomg dept.
Movies
An anonymous reader writes "Just prior to its premiere at MacWorld later this week, CNet has a review of MacHeads, the new documentary film covering the obsessive world of Apple fanboyism. MacHeads features commentary from original Apple employees, the self-confessed Apple-obsessed and girls who claim they'll never sleep with Windows users. Summed up by CNet: 'MacHeads is a superb film that will give Apple haters a few cheap laughs, and Apple fans a few cheap thrills. But it'll entertain both equally, while educating everybody else.'"
apple movies tittieslovemac macsucks cult
apple movies
story
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Comments: 220
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  Science: The Perils of Simplifying Risk To a Single Number on Monday January 05, @08:06AM

Posted by kdawson on Monday January 05, @08:06AM
from the black-swan-rising dept.
Math
A few weeks back we discussed the perspective that the economic meltdown could be viewed as a global computer crash. In the NYTimes magazine, Joe Nocera writes in much more depth about one aspect of the over-reliance on computer models in the ongoing unpleasantness: the use of a single number to assess risk. Reader theodp writes: "Relying on Value at Risk (VaR) and other mathematical models to manage risk was a no-brainer for the Wall Street crowd, at least until it became obvious that the risks taken by the largest banks and investment firms were so excessive and foolhardy that they threatened to bring down the financial system itself. Nocera explores the age-old debate between those who assert that the best decisions are based on quantification and numbers, and those who base their decisions on more subjective degrees of belief about the uncertain future. Reliance on models created a 'false sense of security among senior managers and watchdogs,' argues Nassim Nicholas Taleb, who likens VaR to 'an air bag that works all the time, except when you have a car accident.'"
business math risk value nytimes
science math
story
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Comments: 249
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  Games: PS2 the Most Played Console In 2008 on Monday January 05, @06:33AM

Posted by Soulskill on Monday January 05, @06:33AM
from the helps-that-they-sold-140-million-of-them dept.
PlayStation (Games)
An anonymous reader writes "In terms of console usage, the aging PS2 still leads the competition, according to data from US research firm Nielsen. Data the company compiled between January and October 2008 shows that the PS2 commanded 31.7 percent of the total number of minutes spent playing consoles. Only 37.9 percent of play time took place on current-gen systems, with the Xbox 360 (17.2 percent) leading the Wii (13.4 percent) and the PS3 (7.3 percent). Users even spent more time playing on the original Xbox (9.7 percent) than the PS3, while Nintendo's GameCube (4.6 percent) wasn't far behind Sony's new console either." World of Warcraft once again topped the most-played PC game list by a large margin. Tetris was the top mobile game, followed by Bejeweled and Guitar Hero III.
playstation sony games wow
games playstation
story
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Comments: 134
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  Technology: Software Development Predictions For 2009 on Monday January 05, @05:25AM

Posted by kdawson on Monday January 05, @05:25AM
from the hand-writing-on-the-wall dept.
Software
snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister lays out his development predictions for 2009. These include further struggles from Microsoft in retooling its image, a more open source mindset for Java, twilight for Sun, the Web as platform of choice, and a dearth of innovation due to dwindling economic prospects. 'When customers aren't buying, tool vendors don't innovate — so don't expect many groundbreaking new technologies to debut this year,' McAllister writes, adding that smart companies will realize that 'process automation is one of the best ways to reduce costs in any business,' making 2009 the ideal time to 'revisit old software schemes that got shelved back when staffing budgets were flush.'"
software dnfreleased crystalball !whocares sunsetting
tech software
story
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Comments: 108
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  Apple: Why Game Developers Should Support OS X and Linux on Monday January 05, @04:31AM

Posted by Soulskill on Monday January 05, @04:31AM
from the good-faith dept.
PC Games (Games)
kevind23 writes "Although Mac OS X and Linux have a small (but growing) market share, Jeff from Wolfire Games argues that supporting non-Windows platforms can lead to a huge increase in game sales. Using their popular game Lugaru as an example, he shows how less-popular platforms, or more specifically, their userbase can be a powerful advertising force. This can lead to a dramatic increase in popularity and exposure, which usually means a large boost in overall sales. The short article is an interesting read, especially for those working in game development and sales."
linux pcgames games macosx onebutan
apple pcgames
story
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Comments: 241
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  Technology: Player Piano Roll Production Ceases on Monday January 05, @03:28AM

Posted by kdawson on Monday January 05, @03:28AM
from the day-the-music-died dept.
Media
boustrophedon writes "The Buffalo News reports that QRS Music Technologies halted production of player piano rolls 108 years after the company was founded in Chicago. QRS continues to make digitized and computerized player-piano technology that runs on CDs. 'We're still doing what we always did, which is to provide software for pianos that play themselves. It's just the technology that has changed. But I would be lying to say [the halting of production] doesn't sadden me,' said Bob Berkman, the company's music director. Piano rolls can last for decades, but not forever. Volunteers at the International Association of Mechanical Music Preservationists build piano-roll scanners to scan rolls optically and convert them to MIDI files. The IAMMP archive and others contain thousands of scanned rolls."
technology media music literalrickroll buggywhip
tech media
story
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Comments: 111
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  Technology: How Web Advertising May Go on Monday January 05, @01:24AM

Posted by kdawson on Monday January 05, @01:24AM
from the hoping-it's-the-worst-case-scenario dept.
The Internet
Anti-Globalism sends us to Ars Technica for Jon Stokes's musing on the falling value of Web advertising. Stokes put forward the outlying possibility — not a prediction — that ad rates could fall by 40% before turning up again, if they ever do. "A web page, in contrast, is typically festooned with hyperlinked visual objects that fall all over themselves in competing to take you elsewhere immediately once you're done consuming whatever it is that you came to that page for. So the page itself is just one very small slice of an unbounded media experience in which a nearly infinite number of media objects are scrambling for a vanishingly small sliver of your attention. ... We've had a few hundred years to learn to monetize print, over 75 years to monetize TV, and, most importantly, millennia to build business models based on scarcity. In contrast, our collective effort to monetize post-scarcity digital media have only just begun."
money internet stopsayingmonetize adblock lolno
tech internet
story
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Comments: 194
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  Your Rights Online: WSJ Confirms RIAA Fired MediaSentry on Sunday January 04, @10:23PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday January 04, @10:23PM
from the meet-the-new-boss dept.
Music
newtley writes "Two days ago we discussed the earlier p2pnet report that the RIAA had fired MediaSentry (now called SafeNet). Now the Wall Street Journal is confirming this report. MediaSentry has been 'invading the privacy of people,' the WSJ quotes Ray Beckerman; 'They've been doing very sloppy work.' Beckerman cites MediaSentry's practice of 'looking for available songs in people's filesharing folders, uploading them, and using those uploads in court as evidence of copyright violations.' MediaSentry 'couldn't prove defendants had shared their files with anyone other than MediaSentry investigators.' The WSJ notes, 'In place of MediaSentry, the RIAA says it will use Copenhagen-based DtecNet Software ApS. The music industry had worked with DtecNet previously both in the US and overseas, and liked its technology...' "
music !upload losers !lessevil haha
yro music
story
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Comments: 149
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  Your Rights Online: UK Police To Step Up Hacking of Home PCs on Sunday January 04, @08:13PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday January 04, @08:13PM
from the must-be-ok-if-the-good-guys-do-it dept.
Privacy
toomanyairmiles writes "The Times of London reports that the United Kingdom's Home Office has quietly adopted a new plan to allow police across Britain to routinely hack into people's personal computers without a warrant. The move, which follows a decision by the European Union's council of ministers in Brussels, has angered civil liberties groups and opposition MPs. They described it as a sinister extension of the surveillance state that drives 'a coach and horses' through privacy laws."
government privacy bigbrother yro georgeorwelleatyourheartout
yro privacy
story
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Comments: 557
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  The Exact Cause of the Zune Meltdown on Sunday January 04, @06:05PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday January 04, @06:05PM
from the off-by-one-every-four dept.
Microsoft
An anonymous reader writes "The Zune 30 failure became national news when it happened just three days ago. The source code for the bad driver leaked soon after, and now, someone has come up with a very detailed explanation for where the code was bad as well as a number of solutions to deal with it. From a coding/QA standpoint, one has to wonder how this bug was missed if the quality assurance team wasn't slacking off. Worse yet: this bug affects every Windows CE device carrying this driver."
microsoft music negligence epicfail outsourcing
microsoft
story
Read More 450 comments
Comments: 450
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  News: Data Mining Rescues Investigative Journalism on Sunday January 04, @04:49PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday January 04, @04:49PM
from the radical-transparency dept.
The Media
John Mecklin sends in word of initiatives through which the digital revolution that has been undermining in-depth reportage may be ready to give something back, through a new academic and professional discipline known as "computational journalism." "James Hamilton, director of the DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy at Duke University, is in the process of filling an endowed chair with a professor who will develop sophisticated computing tools that enhance the capabilities — and, perhaps more important in this economic climate, the efficiency — of journalists and other citizens who are trying to hold public officials and institutions accountable. The goal: Computer algorithms that can sort through the huge amounts of databased information available on the Internet, providing public-interest reporters with sets of potential story leads they otherwise might never have found. Or, in short, data mining in the public interest."
media internet buzzwordattack buzzword journalism
news media
story
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Comments: 90
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  Entertainment: Image of Popeye Enters Public Domain In the EU on Sunday January 04, @03:34PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday January 04, @03:34PM
from the yam-what-he-yam dept.
The Media
Several readers wrote in to mention that the copyright on the image of the character Popeye expired in the EU as the year began, 70 years since the death of its creator Elzie Segar. The US will have to wait until 2024, 95 years after Segar's death. Only Popeye's image is free of trademark in the EU; the name "Popeye" is still under copyright by King Features Syndicate. Popeye made his first appearance in a comic strip in 1929 and became hugely popular in the 1930s. The Times claims that Popeye now moves $2.8B of merchandise per year. Le Monde's coverage (in Google translation) mentions the real-life people in Segar's early experience who inspired some of the Popeye cast of characters. Popeye himself was based on the prize fighter Frank "Rocky" Fiegel.
media entertainment popeye math spinach
entertainment media
story
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Comments: 210
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  Technology: Amtrak Photo Contestant Arrested By Amtrak Police on Sunday January 04, @02:22PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday January 04, @02:22PM
from the what-we-have-here-is-a-failure-to-communicate dept.
Transportation
Photographer Duane Kerzic was standing on the public platform in New York's Penn Station, taking pictures of trains in hopes of winning the annual photo contest that Amtrak had been running since 2003. Amtrak police arrested him for refusing to delete the photos when asked, though they later charged him with trespassing. "Obviously, there is a lack of communication between Amtrak's marketing department, which promotes the annual contest, called Picture Our Trains, and its police department, which has a history of harassing photographers for photographing these same trains. Not much different than the JetBlue incident from earlier this year where JetBlue flight attendants had a woman arrested for refusing to delete a video she filmed in flight while the JetBlue marketing department hosted a contest encouraging passengers to take photos in flight." Kerzic's blog has an account of the arrest on Dec. 21 and the aftermath.
security transportation suethebastards likerainonyourweddingday slashdotted
tech transportation
story
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Comments: 647
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  Technology: Developing "Eyes-Free" Gadgets and Applications on Sunday January 04, @01:06PM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday January 04, @01:06PM
from the translating-web-sights dept.
Input Devices
The New York Times is running a story about Google engineer T. V. Raman, who lost his vision at age 14 but didn't let that stand in the way of his interest in technology. In addition to modifying a version of Google's search engine to give preference to pages that were more compliant with accessibility guidelines, Raman is now working on making cell phones easier to use without needing to look at them. "Since he cannot precisely hit a button on a touch screen, Mr. Raman created a dialer that works based on relative positions. It interprets any place where he first touches the screen as a 5, the center of a regular telephone dial pad. To dial any other number, he simply slides his finger in its direction — up and to the left for 1, down and to the right for 9, and so on. If he makes a mistake, he can erase a digit simply by shaking the phone, which can detect motion." Raman and a co-worker, Charles Chen, are also attempting to extend various phones' ability to read back scanned text to include signs that are anywhere in the phone's field of view.
inputdev software technology gui cellphones
tech inputdev
story
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Comments: 84
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  Developers: Perl Migrates To the Git Version Control System on Sunday January 04, @11:53AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday January 04, @11:53AM
from the git-on-up dept.
Perl
On Elpeleg writes "The Perl Foundation has announced they are switching their version control systems to git. According to the announcement, Perl 5 migration to git would allow the language development team to take advantage of git's extensive offline and distributed version support. Git is open source and readily available to all Perl developers. Among other advantages, the announcement notes that git simplifies commits, producing fewer administrative overheads for integrating contributions. Git's change analysis tools are also singled out for praise. The transformation from Perforce to git apparently took over a year. Sam Vilain of Catalyst IT 'spent more than a year building custom tools to transform 21 years of Perl history into the first ever unified repository of every single change to Perl.' The git repository incorporates historic snapshot releases and patch sets, which is frankly both cool and historically pleasing. Some of the patch sets were apparently recovered from old hard drives, notching up the geek satisfaction factor even more. Developers can download a copy of the current Perl 5 repository directly from the perl.org site, where the source is hosted."
git perl programming gitoffmylawn iphone
developers perl
story
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Comments: 247
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  News: Stallman On the State of Free Software 25 Years On on Sunday January 04, @10:38AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday January 04, @10:38AM
from the industry-of-free dept.
GNU is Not Unix
TRNick writes "What's the state of free software, 25 years after GNU's birth? TechRadar has an interview with Richard Stallman to find out. Stallman thinks free software is making good progress: 'Nowadays hardware developers are also increasingly likely to publish the interface specs so that we can develop free software that works with the hardware. Perhaps we are turning the corner, but we still have a big fight on our hands before all computer users have freedom.' But how many of us actually run an operating system that Richard Stallman would consider free? Many of the more popular GNU/Linux distributions, including Mandriva and Ubuntu, bundle proprietary code with their free software packages. Perhaps free software has reached a large enough install base that companies are happy to use it for their own gain, but aren't quite so willing to make their own commitments to free software development. How important this is to the success of free software depends on how strong your stance is on freedom is."
gnu software rms news free
news gnu
story
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Comments: 344