Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments
Search

Filter Preferences Close

Firehose
Filter firehose to

Slashdot stories can be listened to in audio form via an RSS feed, as read by our own robotic overlord.

+ -

  Science: Acquired Characteristics May Be Inheritable on Sunday February 15, @11:58PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @11:58PM
from the Lamarck's-revenge dept.
Biotech
A story from a week or so back in Technology Review describes research coming to the surprising conclusion that Jean-Baptiste Lamarck may have been right — that acquired characteristics can be passed on to offspring, at least in rodents. Lamarck's ideas have been controversial for 200 years, and dismissed in mainstream scientific thinking for nearly that long. "In Feig's study, mice genetically engineered to have memory problems were raised in an enriched environment — given toys, exercise, and social interaction — for two weeks during adolescence. The animals' memory improved... The mice were then returned to normal conditions, where they grew up and had offspring. This next generation of mice also had better memory, despite having the genetic defect and never having been exposed to the enriched environment."
biotech science notgenetic geneticmemory
science biotech
story
Read More 7 comments
Comments: 7
+ -

  Technology: The Role of Experts In Wikipedia on Sunday February 15, @10:05PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @10:05PM
from the epistemology-recapitulates-ontology dept.
The Internet
Hugh Pickens writes "Episteme, a magazine about the social dimensions of knowledge, has a special issue on the epistemology of mass collaboration, with many of the articles focusing on Wikipedia. One of the most interesting articles is by Lawrence M. Sanger on the special role of experts in the age of Wikipedia. Sanger says the main reason that Wikipedia's articles are as good as they are is that they are edited by knowledgeable people to whom deference is paid, although voluntarily, but that some articles suffer precisely because there are so many aggressive people who 'guard' articles and drive off others (PDF), including people more expert than they are. 'Without granting experts any authority to overrule such people, there is no reason to think that Wikipedia'a articles are on a vector toward continual improvement,' writes Sanger. Wikipedia's success cannot be explained by its radical egalitarianism or its rejection of expert involvement, but instead by its freedom, openness, and bottom-up management and there is no doubt that many experts would, if left to their own devices, dismantle the openness that drives the success of Wikipedia. 'But the failure to take seriously the suggestion of any role of experts can only be considered a failure of imagination,' writes Sanger. 'One need only ask what an open, bottom-up system with a role for expert decision-making would be like.' The rest of the articles on the epistemology of mass collaboration are available online, free for now." Sanger was one of the founders of Wikipedia, and of its failed predecessor Nupedia, who left the fold because of differences over the question of the proper role of experts. Sanger forked Wikipedia to found Citizendium, which we have discussed on several occasions. After 2-1/2 years, Citizendium has a few tenths of a percent as many articles as Wikipedia.
internet flamebait obviously
tech internet
story
Read More 50 comments
Comments: 50
+ -

  Science: Collided Satellite Debris Coming Down? on Sunday February 15, @08:08PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @08:08PM
from the boom-crash dept.
Space
Jamie found this Bad Astronomy blog on the many reports beginning about 7 hours ago of one or more fireballs in the sky across Texas. That blog's proprietor first doubted that the phenomena could be due to the satellites that collided in orbit last week, but later left the possibility open. The National Weather Service for Jackson, KY put out an announcement about possible explosions and earthquakes across the area and blamed the defunct satellites. "These pieces of debris have been causing sonic booms...resulting in the vibrations being felt by some residents...as well as flashes of light across the sky. The cloud of debris is likely the result of the recent in orbit collision of two satellites on Tuesday...February 10th when Kosmos 2251 crashed into Iridium 33." An Austin TV station has more reports.
space science
science space
story
Read More 77 comments
Comments: 77
+ -

  IT: Do We Need a New Internet? on Sunday February 15, @06:12PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @06:12PM
from the alarmist-or-cassandra dept.
Security
Richard.Tao and a number of other readers sent in a NYTimes piece by John Markoff asking whether the Internet is so broken it needs to be replaced. "...[T]here is a growing belief among engineers and security experts that Internet security and privacy have become so maddeningly elusive that the only way to fix the problem is to start over. What a new Internet might look like is still widely debated, but one alternative would, in effect, create a 'gated community' where users would give up their anonymity and certain freedoms in return for safety. Today that is already the case for many corporate and government Internet users. As a new and more secure network becomes widely adopted, the current Internet might end up as the bad neighborhood of cyberspace. You would enter at your own risk and keep an eye over your shoulder while you were there." A less alarmist reaction to the question was blogged by David Akin: "If you build a new Internet and you want me to get a license to drive on it, sorry. I'm hanging out here in v.1."
internet security
it security
story
Read More 420 comments
Comments: 420
+ -

  News: High Tech Misery In China on Sunday February 15, @04:55PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @04:55PM
from the dawn-of-the-industrial-age dept.
The Almighty Buck
theodp writes "Think you've got a bad job? Think again. You could be making keyboards for IBM, Microsoft, Dell, Lenovo and HP at Meitai Plastic and Electronics, a Chinese hardware factory. Prompted by the release of High Tech Misery in China by a human-rights group, a self-regulating body set up by tech companies will conduct an audit of working conditions at the factory. In return for take-home pay of 41 cents per hour, workers reportedly sit on hard wooden stools for 12-hour shifts, seven days a week. Overtime is mandatory, with workers being given on average two days off per month. While on the production line, workers are not allowed to raise their hands or heads, are given 1.1 seconds to snap each key into place, and are encouraged to 'actively monitor each other' to see if any company rules are being transgressed. They are also monitored by guards. Workers are fined if they break the rules, locked in the factory for four days per week, and sleep in crowded dormitories. Okay, it's not all bad news — they're hiring."
business money
news money
story
Read More 556 comments
Comments: 556
+ -

  Science: Sea Sponge Extract Conquers Resistant Bacteria on Sunday February 15, @03:40PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @03:40PM
from the soaking-it-in dept.
Medicine
Science News has an article on research into a compound found in a particular kind of sea sponge that seems to have the ability to restore antibiotics' effectiveness against resistant bacteria. The hope is that, since the compound is not itself deadly or even harmful to bacteria, it may skew the antibiotic-bacteria arms race in our favor. "Chemical analyses of the sponge's chemical defense factory pointed to a compound called algeferin. Biofilms, communities of bacteria notoriously resistant to antibiotics, dissolved when treated with fragments of the algeferin molecule. And new biofilms did not form. So far, the algeferin offshoot has, in the lab, successfully treated bacteria that cause whooping cough, ear infections, septicemia and food poisoning. The compound also works on... [MRSA] infections, which wreak havoc in hospitals. 'We have yet to find one that doesn't work,' says [one of the researchers]."
science medicine spongebob seaspongerun overuse
science medicine
story
Read More 91 comments
Comments: 91
+ -

  Your Rights Online: Canon Tries To Shut Down "Fake" Canon Blog on Sunday February 15, @02:25PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @02:25PM
from the what-part-of-fake-do-you-not-understand dept.
Censorship
Thomas Hawk writes "An interesting twist over at the Fake Chuck Westfall Blog. Fake Chuck (like Fake Steve before him) has a blog out parodying Canon's real Technical Information Advisor Chuck Westfall. It seems that Canon and their lawyers over at Loeb & Loeb are none too fond of all the fun that Fake Chuck and DSLR geeks everywhere have been having at their expense and have sent Fake Chuck's blog hosting company, WordPress, a notice to take the blog down. Canon's lawyers cite that Fake Chuck's blog is 'calculated to mislead recipients,' even though the blog has 'fake' in the title, 'fake' in the URL and 'fake' just about everywhere else in the blog. What in the heck is wrong with Canon? Do they really think that trying to shut down a parody blog is going to make their new 5D Mark II ship any faster?" After Fake Chuck removed the Canon logo from his site, WordPress is standing behind him and has rebuffed Canon's demand.
streisandeffect censorship yro parody thing
yro censorship
story
Read More 91 comments
Comments: 91
+ -

  Science: "Microsaccades" Help To Refresh Your Field of View on Sunday February 15, @01:12PM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday February 15, @01:12PM
from the adding-a-new-word-to-the-spellchecker dept.
Medicine
Ponca City, We love you writes with news of research from the Salk Institute into small, unconscious eye movements called "microsaccades," the purpose of which has been in question for many years. A recent study showed that those movements were essentially responsible for maintaining a coherent image for interpretation by the brain. They are also the cause of a famous optical illusion in which a still image appears to move. '"Because images on the retina fade from view if they are perfectly stabilized, the active generation of fixational eye movements by the central nervous system allows these movements to constantly shift the scene ever so slightly, thus refreshing the images on our retina and preventing us from going 'blind,'" explains Hafed. "When images begin to fade, the uncertainty about where to look increases the fluctuations in superior colliculus activity, triggering a microsaccade," adds Krauzlis.'"
science !news screensaver medicine screensavers
science medicine
story
Read More 79 comments
Comments: 79
+ -

  Technology: How Google Decides To Cancel a Project on Sunday February 15, @11:56AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday February 15, @11:56AM
from the if-it-doesn't-sound-good-with-a-leading-g dept.
Google
The New York Times is running a story about the criteria involved when Google scraps one of their projects. While a project's popularity among users is important, Google also examines whether they can get enough employees interested in it, and whether it has a large enough scope — they prefer not to waste time solving minor problems. The article takes a look at the specific reasons behind the recent cancellation of several products. "Dennis Crowley, one of two co-founders who sold Dodgeball to Google in 2005 and stayed on, said that he had trouble competing for the attention of other Google engineers to expand the service. 'If you're a product manager, you have to recruit people and their "20 percent time."' ... [Jeff Huber, the company's senior vice president of engineering] said that Google eventually concluded that Dodgeball's vision was too narrow. ... Still, Google found the concepts behind Dodgeball intriguing, and early this month, it released Google Latitude, an add-on to Google Maps that allows people to share their location with friends and family members. It's more sophisticated than Dodgeball, with automatic location tracking and more options for privacy and communication."
google software
tech google
story
Read More 64 comments
Comments: 64
+ -

  Games: Gamers, EFF Speak Out Against DRM on Sunday February 15, @10:43AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday February 15, @10:43AM
from the because-bullets-won't-kill-it dept.
Software
Last month, we discussed news that the FTC would be examining DRM to see if it needs regulation. They set up a town hall meeting for late March, and part of that effort involved requesting comments from potential panelists and the general public. Ars Technica reports that responses to the request have been overwhelmingly against DRM, and primarily from gamers. The Electronic Frontier Foundation also took the opportunity to speak out strongly against DRM, saying flat out that "DRM does not prevent piracy," and suggesting that its intended purpose is "giving some industry leaders unprecedented power to influence the pace and nature of innovation and upsetting the traditional balance between the interests of copyright owners and the interests of the public." Their full public comments (PDF) describe several past legal situations supporting that point, such as Sony's fight against mod chips, Blizzard's DMCA lawsuit against an alternative to battle.net, and Sony's XCP rootkit.
drm software eff games law
games software
story
Read More 166 comments
Comments: 166
+ -

  Technology: S3 Graphics Fails At Delivering Linux Driver on Sunday February 15, @09:29AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday February 15, @09:29AM
from the patience-is-not-infinite dept.
Graphics
Ashmash writes "Phoronix is running a story about S3 Graphics failing to provide Linux support for their Chrome 500 products even though they have announced in press releases going back months that there is Linux support. S3 Graphics has gone as far as advertising OpenGL 3.0 support for Linux and one of their representatives had promised a driver by last December. This situation has been going on for months, but there is no Linux driver at all for the Chrome 500 series."
linux graphics falseadvertising epicfail vaporware
tech graphics
story
Read More 115 comments
Comments: 115
+ -

  Entertainment: Internet Killed the Satellite Radio Star on Sunday February 15, @08:15AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @08:15AM
from the finding-an-economically-sensible-use-for-space dept.
Space
theodp writes "As Sirius XM faces bankruptcy, Slate's Farhad Manjoo reports that the company has bigger problems than just the end of cheap credit. While it has what seems like a pretty great service — the world's best radio programming for just a small monthly fee — Sirius XM has been eclipsed by something far cheaper and more convenient: the Internet. Load up Pandora or the Public Radio Tuner on your iPhone, and you've got access to a wider stream of music than you'll ever get through satellite. So forget the satellites, the special radios, and the huge customer acquisition costs, advises Manjoo, and instead focus on getting Howard Stern, Oprah, the NFL, and MLB on every Internet-connected device on the market at very low prices."
internet space entertainment doubtful clueless
entertainment space
story
Read More 300 comments
Comments: 300
+ -

  Linux: Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 "Lenny" Released on Sunday February 15, @05:28AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @05:28AM
from the waiting's-over dept.
Debian
Alexander "Tolimar" Reichle-Schmehl writes "The Debian Project is pleased to announce the official release of Debian GNU/Linux version 5.0 (codenamed Lenny) after 22 months of constant development. With 12 supported computer architectures, more than 23,000 packages built from over 12,000 source packages and 63 languages for the new graphical installer, this release sets new records, once again. Software available in 5.0 includes Linux 2.6.26, KDE 3.5.10, Gnome 2.22.2, X.Org 7.3, OpenOffice.org 2.4.1, GIMP 2.4.7, Iceweasel 3.0.6, Apache 2.2.9, Xen 3.2.1 and GCC 4.3.2. Other notable features are X autoconfiguring itself, full read-write support for NTFS, Java programs in the main repository and a single Blu-Ray disc installation media. You can get the ISOs via bittorrent. The Debian Project also wishes to announce that this release is dedicated to Thiemo Seufer, a Debian Developer who died on December 26th, 2008 in a tragic car accident. As a valuable member of the Debian Project, he will be sorely missed."
debian linux hellfreezesover lenny bittorrent
linux debian
story
Read More 325 comments
Comments: 325
+ -

  News: The Pirate Bay Is Making a "Spectrial" of It on Sunday February 15, @02:44AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @02:44AM
from the step-right-up dept.
The Courts
IDOXLR8 writes "The Harvard Law students defending accused file-swapper Joel Tenenbaum are doing their best to turn his upcoming trial into a media event. But when it comes to pure spectacle, they have nothing on The Pirate Bay. TPB is referring to the event as a 'spectrial,' a cross between a spectacle and a trial. They have set up a site where you can track their current location, complete with journal entries. The trial begins next Monday and features a live audio feed and Twitter translations."
court bittorrent
news court
story
Read More 337 comments
Comments: 337
+ -

  News: A Software License That's Libre But Not Gratis? on Sunday February 15, @12:01AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday February 15, @12:01AM
from the give-the-customer-what-he-wants dept.
GNU is Not Unix
duncan bayne writes "My company is developing some software using Ruby. It's proprietary software — decidedly not free-as-in-beer — but I don't want to tie my customers down with the usual prohibitions on reverse engineering, modification, etc. After all, they're licensing the product from us, so I think they should be able to use it as they see fit. Does anyone know of an existing license that could be used in this case? Something that gives the customer the freedom to modify the product as they want, but prohibits them from creating derivative works, or redistributing it in any fashion?"
software gnu !libre creativecommons
news gnu
story
Read More 215 comments
Comments: 215
+ -

  Science: Russia Aims Towards Mars on Saturday February 14, @10:03PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 14, @10:03PM
from the red-planet-rising dept.
Mars
Iddo Genuth writes "Russia's Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) has announced its intentions to build a low-orbit space station which, according to the agency, will support future exploration of the moon and Mars. There's also a suggestion to extend the operational lifespan of the International Space Station by five more years, resetting its retirement date to 2020. The project proposal is already on its way for review by the Russian government. Some Russian sources also reportedly proposed the (rather ludicrous) idea of converting the ISS into some kind of an interplanetary transport vehicle, which would serve as the 'ultimate mother ship' in manned planetary missions to the moon or even Mars."
mars space science sovietmars redplanet
science mars
story
Read More 147 comments
Comments: 147
+ -

  Science: "Liquid Wood" a Contender To Replace Plastic on Saturday February 14, @08:09PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 14, @08:09PM
from the no-more-starving-bacteria dept.
Earth
Ostracus recommends a Christian Science Monitor piece on the 40-year quest to find a replacement for non-biodegradable plastic. One candidate, written off 20 years back but now developed to the point of practicality, is a formulation based on the lignin found in wood. And it turns out there is another strong environmental reason to put lignin to use in this way: burning it, which is its common fate today, releases the carbon dioxide that trees had sequestered. "Almost 40 years ago, American scientists took their first steps in a quest to break the world's dependence on plastics. But in those four decades, plastic products have become so cheap and durable that not even the forces of nature seem able to stop them. A soupy expanse of plastic waste — too tough for bacteria to break down — now covers an estimated 1 million square miles of the Pacific Ocean. ...[R]esearchers started hunting for a substitute for plastic's main ingredient, petroleum. They wanted something renewable, biodegradable, and abundant enough to be inexpensive."
science earth
science earth
story
Read More 211 comments
Comments: 211
+ -

  IT: Web Scam Bilks State of Utah Out of $2.5M on Saturday February 14, @06:12PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 14, @06:12PM
from the lessons-from-the-nigerian dept.
Security
KitB sends in a story in the Salt Lake Tribune that tells of a Web-based scam, resembling some used by Nigerian gangs, that snared the state of Utah. $2.5M was sent to a bank account in Texas before the bank raised a question and then froze $1.8M in the account. "Thieves apparently used a Nigerian-based scam to steal $2.5 million from the Utah treasury, covering their tracks by using intermediaries and a church address. A Salt Lake Tribune review of the names listed in a search warrant as receiving or transferring money [found] names of African origin or connections to that continent. Michael Kessler, ... a forensic accounting [investigator] in New York City, said the thieves appear to have used a simple scam that originated in Nigeria about five years ago. The Utah theft is the first time he's seen a government victimized. 'Their IT people should have known better,' Kessler said after reviewing a copy of the search warrant Thursday. 'It sounds like any kid could have done this.'"
money security
it security
story
Read More 129 comments
Comments: 129
+ -

  Entertainment: Rabbit Ears To Stage a Comeback Thanks To DTV on Saturday February 14, @04:55PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 14, @04:55PM
from the standing-on-one-leg dept.
Television
Jeffrey Breen writes "Like Monty Python's Killer Rabbit, cheap indoor antennas seem harmless to satellite and cable providers. But with the digital TV transition in the US, rabbit ears can suddenly provide digital-perfect pictures, many more channels, and even on-screen program guides. Already feeling pressure as suddenly budget-conscious consumers shed premium channels, providers must now get creative to protect their low-end as well."
business tv entertainment competition usa
entertainment tv
story
Read More 249 comments
Comments: 249
+ -

  Technology: Net Neutrality Still Lives on Saturday February 14, @03:39PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 14, @03:39PM
from the not-dead-yet dept.
The Internet
BuhDuh writes "Despite previous reports, and as subsequently discussed here, it appears that Sen. Feinstein's amendment (PDF) did not make it into the approved 'HR1' version of the stimulus bill (PDF). Of course, I cannot aver to having read all 680 pages, but searching for the terms Ms. Feinstein used came up blank, so it looks like we can breathe a collective sigh of relief until someone tries to bury similar proposals in the next wide-ranging, must-pass piece of legislation."
censorship internet usa politics democrats
tech internet
story
Read More 89 comments
Comments: 89
+ -

  News: Abraham Lincoln the Early Adopter on Saturday February 14, @02:41PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 14, @02:41PM
from the techno-bunny dept.
United States
Hugh Pickens writes "On the 200th anniversary of his birth, President Abraham Lincoln's popular image as a log-splitting bumpkin is being re-assessed as historians have discovered that Lincoln had an avid interest in cutting-edge technology and its applications. During the war, Lincoln haunted the telegraph office (which provided the instant-messaging of its day) for the latest news from the front; he encouraged weapons development and even tested some new rifles himself on the White House lawn; and he is the only US president to hold a patent (No. 6469, granted May 22, 1849). It was for a device to lift riverboats over shoals. 'He not only created his own invention but had ideas for other inventions, such as an agricultural steam plow and a naval steam ram, [and] was fascinated by patent cases as an attorney and also by new innovations during the Civil War,' says Jason Emerson, author of Lincoln the Inventor. But Lincoln's greatest contribution to the war effort was his use of the telegraph. When Lincoln took office the White House had no telegraph connection. Lincoln 'developed the modern electronic leadership model, says Tom Wheeler, author of Mr. Lincoln's T-Mails: The Untold Story of How Abraham Lincoln Used the Telegraph To Win the Civil War. At a time when electricity was a vague scientific concept and sending signals through wires was 'mind boggling,' Lincoln was fascinated by the telegraph and developed it into a political and military tool that allowed him to project himself to the front to monitor and track what was going on. 'If he were alive today, we'd call him an early adopter,' says Wheeler."
politics usa technology steampunk getoffmylawn
news usa
story
Read More 240 comments
Comments: 240
+ -

  Politics: Open Source Study Included In US Stimulus Package on Saturday February 14, @01:10PM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @01:10PM
from the i'm-sure-that-makes-us-socialists-somehow dept.
Government
gclef writes "Buried deep in the details of the US stimulus package is an interesting provision that might go a long way toward helping Open Source software break into the medical area. It says that the Secretary of Health and Human Services should study the availability of open source health technology systems (PDF, page 488), compare their TCO against proprietary systems and report on what they find no later than Oct 1, 2010. Slashdotters may also be interested in the language that starts on page 553 of that PDF to see just what the final package says about broadband." The stimulus plan was approved by the Senate on Friday and is expected to be signed by President Obama by Monday.
portables government money politics software
politics government
story
Read More 182 comments
Comments: 182
+ -

  Technology: Automation May Make Toll Roads More Common on Saturday February 14, @11:58AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @11:58AM
from the first-cameras,-then-evil-toll-robots dept.
Transportation
bfwebster writes "Here in Denver, we have E-470, a toll section of the 470 beltway, that uses the usual transponder attached to your windshield. Fair enough, and I make use of it, particularly in driving to the airport. But they've just implemented new technology on E-470 that allows anyone to drive through the automated toll gates. If you don't have a transponder, it takes a photo of your license plate and sends a monthly bill to your house. As a result, the company that runs E-470 plans to close all human-staffed toll booths by mid-summer. And as an article in this morning's Rocky Mountain News> notes, 'Such a system could be deployed on other roads, including some that motorists now use free. The result: a new source of money for highways and bridges badly in need of repair.' You can bet that legislators, mayors, and city councilpersons everywhere will see this as an even-better source of income than red-light cameras. You've been warned."
money privacy transportation trolls
tech transportation
story
Read More 553 comments
Comments: 553
+ -

  Entertainment: Reverse Engineering a Missile Launcher Toy's Interface on Saturday February 14, @10:44AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @10:44AM
from the target-that-explosion-and-fire dept.
Toys
nitro writes "A fairly in-depth technical report by the security researchers at TippingPoint was released on how to reverse engineer the proprietary protocol for controlling a USB missile-launching toy system. They develop an iPhone application to control the device. 'The hardware is coupled with a simple GUI controller written in Delphi (MissileLauncher.exe) and a USB Human Interface Device (HID) interface written in C++ (USBHID.dll). The toys lost their allure within minutes of harassing my team with a barrage of soft missile shots. That same night I thought I would be able to extend the fun factor by coding up a programmatic interface to the launchers in Python. ... One interesting thing is that we have a lot more granular control of the turret movement now than we did with the original GUI. I wrote two simple loops to count the number of possible horizontal and vertical ticks and the results were 947 horizontal and 91 vertical versus 54 and 10 from the original GUI respectively. Granular control allows you to slowly and quietly reposition the turret for stealthy attacks.'"
hardhack toy
entertainment toy
story
Read More 110 comments
Comments: 110
+ -

  News: New Bill Would Repeal NIH Open Access Policy on Saturday February 14, @09:32AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @09:32AM
from the knowledge-is-power dept.
United States
pigah writes "The Fair Copyright in Research Works Act has been reintroduced into Congress. The bill will ban open access policies in federal agencies, such as the National Institutes of Health (NIH). These policies require scientists to provide public access to their work if it has been funded with money from an agency with an open access policy. Such policies ensure that the public has access to read the results of research that it has funded. It appears that Representative John Conyers (D-MI), the author of the bill, is doing the bidding of publishing companies who do not want to lose control of this valuable information that they sell for exorbitant fees thereby restricting access by the general public to an essentially public good."
politics usa science greed corruption
news usa
story
Read More 218 comments
Comments: 218
+ -

  Linux: Red Hat Enlists Community Help To Fight Patent Trolls on Saturday February 14, @08:19AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @08:19AM
from the strength-in-numbers dept.
Red Hat Software
Stickster writes "Back in 2007, IP Innovation filed a lawsuit against Red Hat and Novell. IP Innovation is a subsidiary of Acacia Technologies. You may have heard of them — they're reported to be the most litigious patent troll in the USA, meaning they produce nothing of value other than money from those whom they sue (or threaten to sue) over patent issues. They're alleging infringement of patents on a user interface that has multiple workspaces. Hard to say just what they mean (which is often a problem in software patents), but it sounds a lot like functionality that pretty much all programmers and consumers use. That patent was filed back on March 25, 1987 by some folks at Xerox/PARC, which means that prior art dated before then is helpful — and art dated before March 25, 1986 is the most useful. (That means art found in a Linux distribution may not help, seeing as how Linus Torvalds first began the Linux kernel in 1991.) Red Hat has invited the community to join in the fight against the patent trolls by identifying prior art. They are coordinating efforts through the Post Issue Peer to Patent site, which is administered by the Center for Patent Innovations at the New York Law School, in conjunction with the US Patent and Trademark Office."
patents news redhat troll linux
linux redhat
story
Read More 148 comments
Comments: 148
+ -

  Technology: Competition For the App Store Is Mounting on Saturday February 14, @05:16AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @05:16AM
from the playing-catch-up dept.
Cellphones
MojoKid writes "Right now the only real 'competition' to Apple's App Store is the Android Market. Presently, anyone using an Android-based phone can download applications from the Android Market, which first started offering free applications in October '08. A drawback to Android application developers, however, is the fact that the potential Android Market user base is fairly small right now, as there is presently only one Android phone available, the T-Mobile G1. However, in the coming months we're also going to see more app stores come online for additional smartphone platforms. Nokia will officially launch an app store for its Symbian OS-based smartphones at Mobile World Congress on Monday. Microsoft is also getting in the game for smartphones that run the Windows Mobile OS, with Steve Ballmer delivering the keynote speech at Mobile World Congress as well."
software cellphones
tech cellphones
story
Read More 132 comments
Comments: 132
+ -

  Science: IBM Files Patent For Bullet-Dodging Bionic Armor on Saturday February 14, @02:14AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @02:14AM
from the let-the-matrix-jokes-commence dept.
IBM
An anonymous reader writes with news that IBM has filed a patent for "Bionic body armor" that would protect a wearer from long-range gunfire by detecting the incoming bullets and administering small shocks to the appropriate muscles required for moving out of the way. Quoting the patent: "When a marksman (such as a sniper) is attempting to fire a projectile from a firearm, the marksman typically prefers to be as far away from the target as possible, thus giving him or her a head start for the escape after the firing. As an example, the longest reported sniper hit was from a distance of about 2500 meters, resulting in a time of flight of about 4 seconds for the projectile/bullet. Had the target been aware of the inbound projectile, avoiding it by simply walking away would have been possible." After detecting the projectile, the armor would calculate the trajectory and "stimulate the target to move in a predefined manner ... sufficient to avoid any contact with the approaching projectile."
biotech patents ibm science matrix
science ibm
story
Read More 369 comments
Comments: 369
+ -

  Games: World of Goo Ported To Linux on Saturday February 14, @01:17AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @01:17AM
from the good-for-goo dept.
Games
christian.einfeldt writes "Lovers of both games and Free Open Source Software will be pleased to see that the popular indie puzzle game World of Goo has been released for Linux. It was designed by a small team of two ex-Electronic Arts developers, Kyle Gabler and Ron Carmel, who used their entire combined savings of $10,000.00 USD to create the gooey game aimed at guiding goo balls to salvation. The developers built their gooey world with open-source technologies such as Simple DirectMedia Layer, Open Dynamics Engine for physics simulation, and TinyXML for configuration and animation files. Subversion and Mantis Bug Tracker were used for work coordination. Blogger Ken Starks points out that the release of this popular game for Linux could be a big step toward ending the chicken-and-egg problem of a dearth of good games that run natively under Linux."
games linux linuxgames weloveyou2dboy !opensource
games games
story
Read More 205 comments
Comments: 205
+ -

  News: Canadian Federal Government Mulling Open Source? on Saturday February 14, @12:11AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 14, @12:11AM
from the free-as-in-moose dept.
Government
An anonymous reader points out a CBC report discussing a request from the Canadian government for information about open source software and free proprietary software. Evan Leibovitch, an advocate for open source, says the government's interest was spurred by a desire to reduce expenditures during the recession. "...Leibovitch said he hopes the request will lead to government policies that give 'a level playing field' to vendors of open-source software services, who provide technical and administrative support to companies that use open-source programs. He alleges these service providers currently face barriers when competing with proprietary software vendors in the government procurement process. ... When the government purchases software, it often assumes that it will have to pay for a licence and asks software vendors to bid for the contract, McOrmond said. Vendors of open source software services don't respond to that initial call for tender because they have no licences to sell. But then, the government might ask for a separate round of bids for providing support services for the software, which open-source vendors could provide."
government software technology canada opensource
news government
story
Read More 116 comments
Comments: 116

Slashdot Poll

Poll On my spaceship, I'd like artificial gravity ....
as much like Earth's gravity as practical.
a bit less than Earth's, for cool gymnastics
a bit more than Earth's, for exercise
radically different from Earth's (expl. below)
Why have gravity?
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:461 | Votes:21435

Slashdot Login

Log In

[ Create a new account ]

Recent reviews from Slashdot readers:

Submitting a review for consideration is easy; please first read Slashdot's book review guidelines. Updated: 2008114 by samzenpus

Every love's the love before In a duller dress. -- Dorothy Parker, "Summary"