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  Technology: Some Of Australia's Tubes Are About To Be Filtered on Thursday February 12, @01:55AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday February 12, @01:55AM
from the think-of-the-koala-children dept.
The Internet
Slatterz writes "The first phase of Australia's controversial Internet filters were put in place today, with the Australian government announcing that six ISPs will take part in a six-week pilot. The plan reportedly includes a filter blocking a list of Government-blacklisted sites, and an optional adult content filter, and the government has said it hasn't ruled out the possibility of filtering BitTorrent traffic. The filters have been widely criticized by privacy groups and Internet users, and people have previously even taken to the streets to protest. While Christian groups support the plan, others say filters could slow down Internet speeds, that they don't work, and that the plan amounts to censorship of the Internet. At this stage the filters are only a pilot, and Australia's largest ISP, Telstra, is not taking part. But if the $125.8 million being spent by the Australian Government on cyber-safety is any indication, it's a sign of things to come."
censorship internet censorshit
tech internet
story
Read More 69 comments
Comments: 69
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  Games: Euro Parliament Wants "Red Button" For Shutting Down Games on Thursday February 12, @01:41AM

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday February 12, @01:41AM
from the say-what-now dept.
Games
GamePolitics writes "The European Parliament has actually requested that red, panic-style buttons be set up for use by parents whose children play online games. The buttons would allow the parents to quickly shut the game down should something inappropriate occur. Wouldn't the old-school on-off switch work just as well?" To be fair, the report isn't entirely crazy; it says games "can also be used for educational and medical purposes," and acknowledges that the "presence of violence in video games does not automatically lead to violent behaviour."
games altf4 totc
games games
story
Read More 35 comments
Comments: 35
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  News: Cuba Launches Own Linux Variation on Wednesday February 11, @11:25PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 11, @11:25PM
from the the-people's-OS dept.
Government
willclem writes "According to Reuters, it seems that Cuba has launched it's own variation of Linux in order to fulfill it's government's desire to replace Microsoft operating systems. "Getting greater control over the informatic process is an important issue," said Communications Minister Ramiro Valdes, who heads a commission pushing Cuba's migration to free software."
government os linux its news
news government
story
Read More 150 comments
Comments: 150
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  Politics: Federal Officials and YouTube Nearing a Deal on Wednesday February 11, @09:25PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 11, @09:25PM
from the watching-the-watchers dept.
Politics
GovTechGuy writes "The federal government is on the verge of reaching an agreement with YouTube that would allow agencies to make official use of the popular video-sharing service. A coalition of federal agencies led by the General Service Administration's Office of Citizen Services has been negotiating with Google, YouTube's parent company, since summer 2008 on new terms that would allow agencies to establish their own channels on the site. Agencies have not been able to post videos to YouTube (although many already have) because under the current terms of service, people who post content are subject to their state's liable laws. Federal agencies must adhere to federal law. On Tuesday, government officials said the negotiations were "very close" to being completed."
politics social typoinsummary
politics politics
story
Read More 59 comments
Comments: 59
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  Science: Satellites Collide In Orbit on Wednesday February 11, @07:54PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 11, @07:54PM
from the starpocalypse dept.
Space
DrEnter writes "According to this story on Yahoo, two communications satellites collided in orbit, resulting in two large clouds of debris. The new threat from these debris clouds hasn't been fully determined yet. From the article, 'The collision involved an Iridium commercial satellite, which was launched in 1997, and a Russian satellite launched in 1993 and believed to be nonfunctioning. Each satellite weighed well over 1,000 pounds.' This is the fifth spacecraft/satellite collision to occur in space, but the other four were all fairly minor by comparison."
science
science space
story
Read More 272 comments
Comments: 272
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  IT: MS To Offer Free Windows 7 Upgrade To Vista Users on Wednesday February 11, @06:45PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 11, @06:45PM
from the you-get-what-you-pay-for dept.
Microsoft
crazyeyes writes "With Windows 7 set for release in Dec. 09, Microsoft is getting ready with their free upgrade program, which allows Vista users to switch to Windows 7 when it arrives. The folks at TechARP have consistently scored accurate scoops on Microsoft software releases. They have now revealed Microsoft's upgrade plans, schedules and even screenshots of the upgrade process."
it microsoft
story
Read More 261 comments
Comments: 261
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Screenshot-sm   Idle: Oldest Human Hair Discovered In Fossilized Poop on Wednesday February 11, @05:54PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 11, @05:54PM
from the near-the-top-of-the-food-chain dept.
Image
goran72 writes "A new study has suggested that strands discovered in fossil hyena poop found in a South African cave could be the oldest-known human hairs. According to a report in National Geographic News, researchers discovered the rock-hard hyena dung near the Sterkfontein caves, where many early human ancestor fossils have been found."
science idle scat poupee po
idle science
story
Read More 35 comments
Comments: 35
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  IT: Next Pwn2Own Contest Targets IE8, Firefox, iPhone on Wednesday February 11, @05:43PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @05:43PM
from the better-there-than-in-the-wild dept.
Security
Windows Secrets writes "After two straight years of taking dead aim at Macbooks and Windows-powered machines, hackers at this year's CanSecWest conference will have shiny new targets: Web browsers and mobile phones. According to CanSecWest organisers, there will be two separate Pwn2Own competitions this year — one pitting hackers against IE8, Firefox 3 and Safari and another targeting Google Android, Apple iPhone, Nokia Symbian and Windows Mobile."
security fishinabarrel it
it security
story
Read More 46 comments
Comments: 46
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  Technology: BeOS Successor Haiku Keeps the Faith on Wednesday February 11, @05:00PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @05:00PM
from the still-want-a-be-box-led-meter dept.
Be
kokito writes "OSNews managing editor Thom Holwerda reviews Haiku, the open source successor of the Be operating system. According to the review, Haiku faithfully/successfully replicates the BeOS user experience and 'personality,' boasting very short boot times, the same recognizable but modernized GUI using antialiasing for fonts and all vector graphics as well as vector icons, a file system with support for metadata-based queries (OpenBFS) and support for the BeAPI, considered by some the cleanest programming API ever. The project has also recently released a native GCC 4.3.3 tool chain, clearing the way for bringing up-to-date ports of multi-platform apps such as Firefox and VLC, and making it easier to work on Haiku ports in general." (More below.)
os be
tech be
story
Read More 301 comments
Comments: 301
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  Science: New Success For Brain-Controlled Prosthetic Arm on Wednesday February 11, @04:18PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @04:18PM
from the less-impressive-than-vice-versa dept.
Medicine
An anonymous reader writes "A number of amputees are now using a prosthetic arm that moves intuitively, when they think about moving their missing limb. Todd Kuiken and colleagues at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago surgically rearrange the nerves that normally connect to the lost limb and embed them in muscles in the chest. The muscles are then connected to sensors that translate muscle movements into movement in a robotic arm. The researchers first reported the technique in a single patient in 2007, and have now tested it in several more. The patients could all successfully move the arm in space, mimic hand motions, and pick up a variety of objects, including a water glass, a delicate cracker, and a checker rolling across a table. (Three patients are shown using the arm in the related video.) The findings are reported today in Journal of the American Medical Association."
biotech medicine darthvader science cyborg
science medicine
story
Read More 56 comments
Comments: 56
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  Hardware: The Hairy State of Linux Filesystems on Wednesday February 11, @04:09PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @04:09PM
from the when-shrinkage-is-what-you-want dept.
Data Storage
RazvanM writes "Do the OSes really shrink? Perhaps the user space (MySQL, CUPS) is getting slimmer, but how about the internals? Using as a metric the number of external calls between the filesystem modules and the rest of the Linux kernel I argue that this is not the case. The evidence is a graph that shows the evolution of 15 filesystems from 2.6.11 to 2.6.28 along with the current state (2.6.28) for 24 filesystems. Some filesystems that stand out are: nfs for leading in both number of calls and speed of growth; ext4 and fuse for their above-average speed of growth and 9p for its roller coaster path."
software linux storage flamebait zfs
hardware storage
story
Read More 139 comments
Comments: 139
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  Hardware: Scientists Harvest Nano-Power From Hamsters on Wednesday February 11, @03:39PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @03:39PM
from the diminishing-returns dept.
Power
Al writes "Researchers at Georgia Tech have come up with the ideal way to test a new peizo-electric device that efficiently harvests power from bio-movement — attaching it to a hamster. The device contains a series of zinc-oxide nanowires mounted on top of a flexible plastic surface. As the plastic bends, the wires generate around a nanowatt of power. The Georgia Tech team, led by Zhong Lin Wang, wanted to show that their device could produce power from irregular movements so they attached it to a tiny hamster jacket. They also tried attaching it to a volunteer's finger. Here's a video of the hamster wearing his piezo-power outfit."
Read More 78 comments
Comments: 78
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  Technology: UPS, Generators Join Servers For Boxed Data Centers on Wednesday February 11, @03:18PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @03:18PM
from the one-stop-shopping dept.
The Internet
miller60 writes "As more companies look into using a 'data center in a box,' you can now get your UPS and generator in a box as well. HP and Sun have begun offering containerized power and cooling infrastructure along with their data center containers, offering an expansion path for facility owners that have run out of power and cooling capacity. Microsoft also plans to use containerized power and cooling in its next-generation facilities, allowing it to build them with no roofs (remember its tent data centers?)."
internet tech
tech internet
story
Read More 62 comments
Comments: 62
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  Your Rights Online: Vodafone Hands Data To Egyptian Police on Wednesday February 11, @02:52PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @02:52PM
from the cost-of-doing-business dept.
Privacy
Jack Spine writes "A Vodafone exec has admitted the company handed communications data to the Egyptian police following riots over food shortages last year, to aid the identification of suspects. Egyptian law enforcement has a habit of torturing and murdering detainees, or of having them 'disappear.' This is similar to Yahoo handing details of Chinese dissidents over to the authorities in 2005. It's nice to have it confirmed that multinational service providers shelve morals in the pursuit of cash."
privacy security yro nothingnew murder
yro privacy
story
Read More 81 comments
Comments: 81
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  News: Texas Judge Orders Identification of Topix Trolls on Wednesday February 11, @02:33PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @02:33PM
from the who-the-hell-are-y'all? dept.
The Courts
eldavojohn writes "Ars Technica has a story on a Texas judge who has ordered Topix.com to hand over the identifying details of 178 trolls that allegedly made 'perverted, sick, vile, inhumane accusations' about Mark & Rhonda Lesher. Mark Lesher was accused of sexually assaulting an unidentified former client (and subsequently found not guilty) which prompted the not so understanding discussions on Topix. Topix has until March 6 to give up the information. Let's hope the Leshers don't visit Slashdot!"
court privacy
news court
story
Read More 298 comments
Comments: 298
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  Technology: The Tech Behind Preventing Airplane Bird Strikes on Wednesday February 11, @01:49PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 11, @01:49PM
from the harder-than-it-seems dept.
Transportation
the4thdimension writes "CNN is running an article covering the technology used at Sea-Tac for preventing airplane bird strikes, like the one that occurred weeks ago to the now famous Flight 1549. The hardware used ranges from low-tech pyrotechnics, to netting, to lasers, to avian radar. Using a combination of all these technologies, Sea-Tac believes they save hundreds of thousands of dollars per year in avoiding dangerous bird strikes."
technology transportation laser snarge
tech transportation
story
Read More 218 comments
Comments: 218
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Screenshot-sm   Book Reviews: Beginning Portable Shell Scripting on Wednesday February 11, @01:08PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 11, @01:08PM
from the read-all-about-it dept.
Image
Joe MacDonald writes "The earliest UNIX shell I encountered was the Bourne shell on a SPARCStation 2 at my university. As with many students of my generation, prior to that nearly all of my exposure to command line interfaces was some variant of DOS. I was quite proficient with the primitive scripting language that was available on such platforms but I immediately felt far out of my depth in this new environment. The commands seemed arcane, possibly dangerous, and almost immediately I regretted stepping into this unfamiliar wilderness without some sort of guide." Read below for the rest of Joe's thoughts.
unix
books unix
story
Read More 150 comments
Comments: 150
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  Technology: MS Critical Patch Fixes 8 Vulnerabilities on Wednesday February 11, @11:39AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday February 11, @11:39AM
from the your-server-is-sick dept.
Windows
nandemoari writes "A hole allowing hackers to take control of Microsoft Exchange was just one 'critical' issue the Redmond-based company promises it has fixed with a patch correcting a total of eight vulnerabilities in its programs, including the Internet Explorer browser, Office, and its SQL Server. Three of the eight vulnerabilities patched yesterday were marked 'critical.' The most concerning is an issue with Exchange that would allow attackers to take over an Exchange server by simply forwarding a carefully crafted message to a corporate mail server. Microsoft has admitted that the vulnerability can be exploited when a user opens or previews an email in the Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF)."
security windows tnef
tech windows
story
Read More 196 comments
Comments: 196
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  News: Senator Diane Feinstein Trying to Kill Net Neutrality on Wednesday February 11, @10:53AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday February 11, @10:53AM
from the wonder-what-the-payoff-was dept.
Government
An anonymous reader writes "According to the Register, Senator Diane Feinstein is attempting to put language into the stimulus bill that would kill net neutrality. The amendment that her provision was attached to was withdrawn, but lobbyists tell Public Knowledge that Feinstein hopes to put it back into the bill during the closed-door conference committee that reconciles the House and Senate versions." Bad Senator! No Cookie!
politics internet government democrats
news government
story
Read More 772 comments
Comments: 772
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  Your Rights Online: Author's Guild Says Kindle's Text-To-Speech Software Illegal on Wednesday February 11, @10:15AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday February 11, @10:15AM
from the you-gotta-be-kidding-me dept.
Books
Mike writes "The Author's Guild claims that the new Kindle's text-to-speech software is illegal, stating that 'They don't have the right to read a book out loud,' said Paul Aiken, executive director of the Authors Guild. 'That's an audio right, which is derivative under copyright law.' Forget for a moment that text-to-speech doesn't copy an existing work. And forget the odd notion that the artificial enunciation of plain text is equivalent to a person's nuanced and emotive reading. The Guild's claim is that even to read out loud is a production akin to an illegal copy, or a public performance."
books
yro books
story
Read More 637 comments
Comments: 637
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  Technology: FAA Network Hacked on Wednesday February 11, @09:34AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday February 11, @09:34AM
from the in-good-company dept.
Security
coondoggie writes "The Federal Aviation Administration has joined the growing list of government agencies that have had their supposedly safe systems hacked. The agency this week notified about 45,000 employees that one of its servers was hacked into and employee personal identity information was stolen. The FAA was quick to say the server that was accessed was not connected to the operation of the air traffic control system or any other FAA operational system. It did say two of the 48 files on the breached computer server contained personal information about more than 45,000 FAA employees and retirees who were on the FAA's rolls as of the first week of February 2006."
security technology cipdevice windows microsoft
tech security
story
Read More 109 comments
Comments: 109
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  Hardware: Build a BoxeeBox and Wean Yourself From Cable on Wednesday February 11, @08:52AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday February 11, @08:52AM
from the but-what-about-chuck dept.
Hardware Hacking
Since I've been having serious problems with satellite all week, DeviceGuru's submission was really interesting to me. He says "Inspired by Roku's awesome Netflix video download box and impressed with Boxee's free A/V media center platform, it was merely a matter of time before DeviceGuru blogger Rick Lehrbaum would create the BoxeeBox, an Ubuntu-powered HTPC with Boxee serving as its primary media center UI. Based on a 2.5GHz Core 2 Duo CPU, the BoxeeBox has the look and feel of consumer A/V equipment and packs 2GB RAM, 1TB HDD, CD/DVD drive, USB, Firewire, HDMI, DVI-D, RGB, and 8-channel surround sound audio."
hardhack tv mythtv slashdotted boxxy
hardware hardhack
story
Read More 320 comments
Comments: 320
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  Technology: False Fact On Wikipedia Proves Itself on Wednesday February 11, @08:05AM

Posted by kdawson on Wednesday February 11, @08:05AM
from the round-and-round-it-goes dept.
The Internet
An anonymous reader writes "Germany has a new minister of economic affairs. Mr. von und zu Guttenberg is descended from an old and noble lineage, so his official name is very long: Karl Theodor Maria Nikolaus Johann Jacob Philipp Franz Joseph Sylvester Freiherr von und zu Guttenberg. When first there were rumors that he would be appointed to the post, someone changed his Wikipedia entry and added the name 'Wilhelm,' so Wikipedia stated his full name as: Karl Theodor Maria Nikolaus Johann Jacob Philipp Wilhelm Franz Joseph Sylvester Freiherr von und zu Guttenberg. What resulted from this edit points up a big problem for our information society (in German; Google translation). The German and international press picked up the wrong name from Wikipedia — including well-known newspapers, Internet sites, and TV news such as spiegel.de, Bild, heute.de, TAZ, or Süddeutsche Zeitung. In the meantime, the change on Wikipedia was reverted, with a request for proof of the name. The proof was quickly found. On spiegel.de an article cites Mr. von und zu Guttenberg using his 'full name'; however, while the quote might have been real, the full name seems to have been looked up on Wikipedia while the false edit was in place. So the circle was closed: Wikipedia states a false fact, a reputable media outlet copies the false fact, and this outlet is then used as the source to prove the false fact to Wikipedia."
wikipedia internet echochamber morons recursion
tech internet
story
Read More 485 comments
Comments: 485
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  Games: EVE Devs Dissect, Explain Massive Economic Exploit on Wednesday February 11, @06:33AM

Posted by Soulskill on Wednesday February 11, @06:33AM
from the this-is-how-you-deal-with-such-events dept.
Games
In December we discussed news that a major exploit in EVE Online had just been widely discovered after being abused by a few players for up to four years, creating thousands of real-life dollars worth of unearned in-game currency. Representatives from CCP Games assured players that the matter would be investigated and dealt with; a familiar line in such situations for other multiplayer games, and often the final official word on the matter. Yesterday, CCP completed their investigation and posted an incredibly detailed account of how the exploit worked, what they did to fix it, how it affected the game's economy, and what happened to the players who abused it. Their report ranges from descriptions of the involved algorithms to graphs of the related economic markets to theatrically swooping through the game universe nuking the malfunctioning structures. It's quite comprehensible to non-EVE-players, and Massively has summarized the report nicely. It's an excellent example of transparency and openness in dealing with a situation most companies would be anxious to sweep under the rug.
eve games
games games
story
Read More 129 comments
Comments: 129
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  I'm a PC and I'm 4-1/2 on Wednesday February 11, @04:55AM

Posted by kdawson on Wednesday February 11, @04:55AM
from the tweedledum-tweedledee dept.
Microsoft
theodp writes "Microsoft's new Windows ad made its debut during the Grammy Awards on Sunday. It stars a 4-year-old cutie named Kylie (Silverlight required) showing how easy it is to use Windows Live Photo Gallery to edit and share photos. And while it's impressive that little Kylie is able to transfer a snapshot of her pet fish from her camera to a PC, color-correct it, and e-mail it to her family, what's truly amazing is that the toddler was also apparently able to read, understand, and accept Windows Live's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. (But minors can't legally execute contracts, can they?)"
microsoft tv
microsoft
story
Read More 416 comments
Comments: 416
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  Games: First Doom 4 Production Shots Revealed on Wednesday February 11, @03:49AM

Posted by Soulskill on Wednesday February 11, @03:49AM
from the bring-a-flashlight dept.
First Person Shooters (Games)
An anonymous reader writes "Actor Brad Hawkins has been tapped to do motion-capture work for Doom 4, and revealed that the game features the military and civilians fighting side by side. Does this mean the game is set on Earth for sure? GGL Wire has an interview with Hawkins and a selection of production shots. '[Filmmaker Mark Bristol] was very specific on the civilians having a certain personality and the military characters having a separate one as well. The body language of the civilians is less, well, "trained." They carry their guns in a looser fashion and are a little sloppier when they run, a little more freestyle. The military characters are sharp as razors, with very swift moves, exact hand positioning and can turn on a dime.'" This follows news from last month that British novelist Graham Joyce was brought in to develop the story for the game.
fps games pcgames slashdotted dark
games fps
story
Read More 129 comments
Comments: 129
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  Science: Fly Me To Which Moon? on Wednesday February 11, @01:43AM

Posted by kdawson on Wednesday February 11, @01:43AM
from the life-don't-talk-to-me-about-life dept.
Space
Hugh Pickens writes "NASA and the European Space Agency are expected later this week to settle an ongoing debate on whether to send a robotic mission to Jupiter's moon Europa or Saturn's moon Titan. Both are difficult places to get to — a mission to either would cost several billion dollars/euros to build and execute — and both have become alluring targets in the quest to learn whether Earth alone supports life. On the one hand, Europa is believed to have liquid oceans beneath its frozen crust which (on Earth at least) are a source of life-supporting chemistry. Scientists would like to scan Europa's surface for bits of material that may have seeped up from beneath the ice. 'Imagine if there were microbes entrained in material that has exuded onto the surface of Europa and they've been sitting there for maybe three million years,' says planetary scientist Dr. Brad Dalton. On the other hand, Titan has two enticing features in the search for life: liquids on the surface, and a thick atmosphere that can be used to slow down a spacecraft and help put it into orbit. Titan's surface water is locked into the crust as ice, but scientists suspect there may be a subsurface ocean where water mingles with ammonia. The mission will not get to the launch pad before 2020. 'It's unfortunate that there has to be a decision,' says NASA/JPL astrobiologist Dr. Kevin Hand. 'It's important to go to both. They are both such amazing and tantalizing worlds in terms of finding life.'"
science space
science space
story
Read More 175 comments
Comments: 175
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  IT: How To Argue That Open Source Software Is Secure? on Tuesday February 10, @11:33PM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday February 10, @11:33PM
from the beyond-because-i-say-so-dammit dept.
Security
Smidge207 writes "Lately there has been a huge push by Certified Microsoft Professionals and their companies to call (potential) clients and warn them of the dangers of open source. This week I received calls from four different customers saying that they were warned that they are dangerously insecure because they run open source operating systems or software, because 'anyone can read the code and hack you with ease.' Other colleagues in the area also have noticed that three local Microsoft Partners have been trying to strike fear in the minds of companies that respond, 'Yes, we use open source or Linux' when the sales call comes in. I know this is simply a sales tactic by these companies, but how do I fix the damage these tactics cause? I have several customers who now want more than my word about the security of systems that have worked for them flawlessly for 5-6 years, with minimal expense outside of upgrades and patching for security. Does anyone have a good plan or sources of reliable information that can be used to inform the customer?"
security microsoft linux peerreview
it security
story
Read More 634 comments
Comments: 634
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  Games: On Game Developers and Legitimacy on Tuesday February 10, @09:25PM

Posted by Soulskill on Tuesday February 10, @09:25PM
from the not-there-yet,-and-most-box-art-doesn't-help dept.
Games
Gamasutra is running a feature by game developer Brian Green on how he and his colleagues are still striving for legitimacy and respect as part of a medium that's still commonly thought of by many as "for kids" and "potentially harmful to kids." He notes that while financial legitimacy is no longer in question, artistic and cultural legitimacy are taking more time. Green makes some interesting parallels to the early movie and comic book industries, and points out that moral outrage against comic books did significant damage to the medium's growth in the US. "... in the United States there was a 'moral panic' about the corrupting influences of comic books on children, as there often is with many 'new' media. The government threatened to enact laws to censor comic books, for the good of the children. (Does that sound familiar to game developers?) The industry reacted by enacting their own regulations, the Comics Code Authority (CCA). The Comics Code Authority heavily restricted the content that comics could contain. For example, the words 'horror' and 'terror' were not allowed in the titles of comics. Werewolves, vampires, zombies, and similar creatures of the night were forbidden."
games awww iwantapony freetards
games games
story
Read More 190 comments
Comments: 190
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  Technology: Miro 2.0 Launches Today on Tuesday February 10, @07:18PM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday February 10, @07:18PM
from the on-the-wall dept.
Television
soDean writes "Miro just launched their 2.0 release today. The free and open source HD video player and Internet TV features an all-new interface and an entirely rewritten UI engine, plus tons of new features and improvements — it's less of a collection of new stuff and more of a rethinking of the whole experience. You can download Miro 2.0 here for Linux, Mac, and Windows. Miro is developed by the Participatory Culture Foundation, a 501(c)(3) non-profit, hell-bent on making Internet video more open and decentralized, along with a dedicated community of users, volunteers, translators, testers, and coders."
internet tv wut miro
tech tv
story
Read More 140 comments
Comments: 140

Slashdot Poll

Poll My handwriting ...
... is more legible than it was 5 years ago.
... is less legible than it was 5 years ago.
... is indistinguishable on this basis from 5 years ago.
... has never been legible by humans anyhow.
What is 'handwriting'?
[ Results | Polls ]
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Submitting a review for consideration is easy; please first read Slashdot's book review guidelines. Updated: 2008114 by samzenpus

Everyone can be taught to sculpt: Michelangelo would have had to be taught how ___not to. So it is with the great programmers.