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  IT: Security Researcher Kaminsky Pushes DNS Patching on Thursday February 19, @07:14PM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday February 19, @07:14PM
from the protect-ya-neck dept.
Security
BobB-nw writes "Dan Kaminsky, who for years was ambivalent about securing DNS, has become an ardent supporter of DNS Security Extensions. Speaking at the Black Hat DC 2009 conference Thursday, the prominent security researcher told the audience that the lack of DNS security not only makes the Internet vulnerable, but is also crippling the scalability of important security technologies. "DNS is pretty much our only way to scale systems across organizational boundaries, and because it is insecure it's infecting everything else that uses" DNS, the fundamental Internet protocol that provides an IP address for a given domain name, said Kaminsky, director of penetration testing at IOActive. 'The only group that has actually avoided DNS because it's insecure are security technologies, and therefore those technologies aren't scaling.'"
security
it security
story
Read More 1 comments
Comments: 1
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  Science: Found In Space (On Flickr) on Thursday February 19, @06:16PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @06:16PM
from the now-that's-clever dept.
Space
Jamie stumbled upon a writeup for all you astronomy and photography buffs out there (Perhaps my Dad or Uncle Jim are reading ;). From the writeup "The "blind astrometry server" is a program which monitors the Astrometry group on Flickr, looking for new photos of the night sky. It then analyzes each photo, and from the unique star positions shown it figures out what part of the sky was photographed and what interesting planets, galaxies or nebulae are contained within. Not only does the photographer get a high-quality description of what's in their photo, but the main Astrometry.net project gets a new image to add to its storehouse of knowledge." Check out the Astrometry.net site for many cool pictures.
space astrometry science admiraltaco unclejim
science space
story
Read More 19 comments
Comments: 19
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  Technology: Obama Anti-Trust Chief on Google the Monopoly Threat on Thursday February 19, @05:33PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @05:33PM
from the it-has-to-be-said dept.
Google
CWmike writes "The blogosphere regularly excoriates Microsoft for being a monopoly, but Google may be in the cross-hairs of the nation's next anti-trust chief for monopolistic behavior, writes Preston Gralla. Last June, Christine A. Varney, President Obama's nominee to be the next antitrust chief, warned that Google already had a monopoly in online advertising. 'For me, Microsoft is so last century. They are not the problem,' Varney said at a June 19 panel discussion sponsored by the American Antitrust Institute, according to a Bloomberg report. The US economy will 'continually see a problem — potentially with Google' because it already 'has acquired a monopoly in Internet online advertising.' Varney has yet to be confirmed as antitrust chief, and she said all this before she was nominated. Still, it spells potentially bad news for Google. It may be time for the company to start adding to its legal staff."
google politics democrats fascist excoriates
tech google
story
Read More 142 comments
Comments: 142
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  Microsoft.com Makes IE8 Incompatibility List! on Thursday February 19, @04:55PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @04:55PM
from the my-head-just-asplodered dept.
Microsoft
nickull writes "Microsoft is tracking incompatible Web sites for its upcoming Internet Explorer 8 browser and has posted a list that now contains about 2,400 names — including Microsoft.com. Apparently, even though Microsoft's IE8 team is doing the 'right' thing by finally making IE more standards-compliant, they are risking 'breaking the Web' because the vast majority of Web sites are still written to work correctly with previous, non-standards-compliant versions of IE."
microsoft ohtheironing
microsoft
story
Read More 147 comments
Comments: 147
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  IT: Attacking Local Browser Storage on Thursday February 19, @04:04PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @04:04PM
from the ripe-for-pwnage dept.
Security
CrazyCanucklehead writes "At the Blackhat security conference in Washington, DC, researcher Michael Sutton has detailed how common XSS flaws in web applications employing (Google) Gears and HTML 5 Database Storage can leave local databases wide open to attack. This comes just as Gears is starting to take off, and just yesterday Google demonstrated a beta version of offline Gmail on phones, thanks to HTML 5 support in WebKit-based browsers, such as those used by Android and the iPhone. Sutton drove home the point by walking through a real world example on commercial site Paymo.biz, which has thankfully since been fixed."
security it
it security
story
Read More 20 comments
Comments: 20
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  News: Pirate Bay Founder Begs For Hacker Ceasefire on Thursday February 19, @03:17PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @03:17PM
from the please-hammer-don't-hurt-'em dept.
The Courts
Barence writes "Pirate Bay's co-founder has pleaded for hackers to stop attacking the sites of those organizations lined up against him. Peter Sunde is on trial with Pirate Bay's three other founders for allegedly distributing copyrighted material. The trial is about to enter its fourth day, and in a gesture of support for the four men hackers have begun assaulting plaintiff websites, beginning with that of the The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. The campaign has caused concern in the Pirate Bay camp, prompting Sunde to write a post entitled 'We're winning, stop hacking, please' on his blog."
news court
story
Read More 141 comments
Comments: 141
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  Technology: Microsoft Unveils Windows 7 File-Sharing Beta on Thursday February 19, @02:31PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @02:31PM
from the we-totally-won't-sell-this-information dept.
Microsoft
nandemoari writes "Microsoft yesterday released a trial version of new file-sharing software intended for use with its upcoming and highly-anticipated operating system. The new software allows PC users to swap files with the computers of friends, family, and trusted colleagues along safe, secure channels. Dubbed "Windows Live ID Sign-in Assistant 6.5," the beta connects the Windows Live IDs of individual users with a Windows 7 account, essentially building a secure link between data stored on a hard drive and information accessible via Windows Live online."
microsoft networking astroturfing
tech microsoft
story
Read More 170 comments
Comments: 170
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  News: Reclaiming Oil Rigs As Oceanic Eco-Resorts on Thursday February 19, @02:00PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @02:00PM
from the they're-prettier-than-they-look dept.
Earth
Mike writes "Here's an innovative reuse for those old abandoned oil rigs littering the ocean — convert them into eco resorts. Morris Architects' Oil Rig Platform Resort and Spa makes use of one of 4,000 oil rigs out in the Gulf of Mexico and transforms it into a beacon of sustainability, re-imagining an iconic source of dirty energy as an eco-haven that generates all of its power from renewable sources."
power science technology earth lipstickonapig
news earth
story
Read More 88 comments
Comments: 88
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  IT: Rogue Anti-Malware Pushes Fake PCMag Review on Thursday February 19, @01:42PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday February 19, @01:42PM
from the well-now-isn't-that-clever dept.
Security
Varzil found an interesting story about some "Rogue Anti-Malware" (which seems to me should just be called 'Malware') which modifies your HOSTS file to trick you into reading a fake anti-virus review which is of course for more malware. Modifying HOSTS is an old trick, but this is interesting because it's actually trying to get you to read fake content: normally this sort of trick is used to prevent you from fixing your computer, but this one is trying to get you to break it even more. I guess friends don't let friends modify their HOSTS files.
security
it security
story
Read More 69 comments
Comments: 69
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  News: Restauranteurs Say Yelp Uses Extortion To Ply Ad Sales on Thursday February 19, @01:09PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @01:09PM
from the not-kosher dept.
Businesses
Readers Mike Van Pelt and EricThegreen point out a story in the East Bay Express alleging that online restaurant review site Yelp is doing more than providing a nice interface for foodies to share their impressions of restaurants. Instead, says the article, representatives from the site have called restaurants in the Bay area to solicit advertising, but with an interesting twist: the ad sales reps let restaurant owners know that, if they buy advertising at around $300 a month, Yelp can "do something" about prominently displayed negative reviews of their restaurants. If the claims are true, it sure lowers my opinion of Yelp, which I'd thought of as one of the good guys (and a useful site). I wonder how many other online review sites might be doing something similar.
business money restaurateurs protectionracket yelp
news business
story
Read More 152 comments
Comments: 152
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Screenshot-sm   Idle: When Servers Explode on Thursday February 19, @12:27PM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday February 19, @12:27PM
from the smash-it-up dept.
Image
1sockchuck writes "Have you ever lost your patience with a server? We're not sure who was the first person to intentionally blow up a server, but plenty of others have followed in their footsteps, and many seem to have captured the event on video. The Gallery of Exploding Servers documents the sometimes incendiary relationship between man and machine. Those who prefer a kinder, gentler disposition may prefer the guide to Flying and Crashing Servers."
idle hardware
story
Read More 118 comments
Comments: 118
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  Linux: 350,000 Linux (Virtual) Desktops Land In Brazil on Thursday February 19, @12:12PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @12:12PM
from the rip-helio-gracie dept.
Education
xufem writes "Millions of Brazilian schoolchildren will soon be 'brought up right' running Linux on over 350,000 seats each using PC sharing hardware and software from Userful and KDE. This is world's largest virtual desktop deployment and probably also the world's largest Linux deployment, and seems to have been selected over OLPC by Brazil. Definitely a moment to celebrate — and just in time for Brazilian Carnival which starts tomorrow!"
Read More 85 comments
Comments: 85
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  Ask Slashdot: How Do You Document Technical Procedures? on Thursday February 19, @11:42AM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @11:42AM
from the mt-spokane-ski-patrol dept.
Businesses
ChadDa3mon writes "I work for a large MSSP type operation and we deal with a plethora of vendors, versions, and .... skill sets. We're facing a critical problem as we grow when trying to deal with these varying degrees of technical competency. The end result is we're getting to the point where we have to document every procedure and process, no matter how mundane or 'common sense' it may seem." How, ChadDa3mon wants to know, can complex skills be documented to account for various users? Read on for more details of what he's seeking.
business software it wiki
askslashdot business
story
Read More 310 comments
Comments: 310
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  Technology: Black Hat Presentation Highlights SSL Encryption Flaws on Thursday February 19, @10:53AM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @10:53AM
from the well-hey-nothin's-perfect dept.
The Internet
nk497 writes "Hackers at the Black Hat conference have shown that SSL encryption isn't as secure as online businesses would like us to think. Independent hacker Moxie Marlinspike showed off several techniques to fool the tech behind the little padlock on your screen. He claimed that by using a real world attack on several secure websites such as PayPal, Gmail, Ticketmaster and Facebook, he garnered 117 email accounts, 16 credit card numbers, seven PayPal logins and 300 other miscellaneous secure logins."
security internet getfool !of
tech internet
story
Read More 124 comments
Comments: 124
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  Technology: Web-based IDEs Edge Closer To the Mainstream on Thursday February 19, @10:04AM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @10:04AM
from the hope-your-connection-is-reliable dept.
Programming
snitch writes "Last week Mozilla released Bespin, their web-based framework for code editing, and only a few days later Boris Bokowski and Simon Kaegi implemented an Eclipse-based Bespin server using headless Eclipse plug-ins. With the presentation of the web-based Eclipse workbench at EclipseCon and the release of products like Heroku, a web-based IDE and hosting environment for RoR apps, it seems that web-based IDEs might soon become mainstream."
programming why cloudcity
tech programming
story
Read More 199 comments
Comments: 199
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  Boxee Drops Hulu Support on Thursday February 19, @09:23AM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @09:23AM
from the back-to-dvds-from-the-library dept.
Media
frdmfghtr writes "According to a boxee blog entry, Hulu will no longer be supported. From the post: 'two weeks ago Hulu called and told us their content partners were asking them to remove Hulu from boxee. we tried (many times) to plead the case for keeping Hulu on boxee, but on Friday of this week, in good faith, we will be removing it. you can see their blog post about the issues they are facing.' Reading the hulu blog post, the only 'issue' I see facing Hulu is that content providers have (once again) shot themselves in the foot, switching off a media conduit they should have been promoting." Update: 02/19 14:31 GMT by T : Jamie points out this interesting (speculative) piece at O'Reilly Radar about the thought process that may have driven the decision.
tv media boxxy corporateidiots
media
story
Read More 330 comments
Comments: 330
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  Technology: In-Game Web Browser Round-Up on Thursday February 19, @08:40AM

Posted by timothy on Thursday February 19, @08:40AM
from the not-complete-until-it-includes-one dept.
The Internet
theodp writes "CNET takes a look at Web browsers you can run inside of the latest video games, offering mini-reviews of PlayXpert, Steam, Rogue, and Xfire. Why run these instead of your standard browser? Well, these browsers run lean and mean, play nice with full-screen apps, provide hot keys that can make them appear or disappear in an instant, and offer transparency so you can continue to play a game in full screen while chatting, reading e-mail or looking up cheat codes. So how much longer before we see a variation of this on our real-world car windshields?"
fps internet information tech embedded
tech internet
story
Read More 167 comments
Comments: 167
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  News: Arctic Ice Extent Understated Because of "Sensor Drift" on Thursday February 19, @07:57AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday February 19, @07:57AM
from the give-it-a-few-taps dept.
Earth
dtjohnson writes "The National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) has been at the forefront of predicting doom in the arctic as ice melts due to global warming. In May, 2008 they went so far as to predict that the North Pole would be ice-free during the 2008 'melt season,' leading to a lively Slashdot discussion. Today, however, they say that they have been the victims of 'sensor drift' that led to an underestimation of Arctic ice extent by as much as 500,000 square kilometers. The problem was discovered after they received emails from puzzled readers, asking why obviously sea-ice-covered regions were showing up as ice-free, open ocean. It turns out that the NSIDC relies on an older, less-reliable method of tracking sea ice extent called SSM/I that does not agree with a newer method called AMSR-E. So why doesn't NSIDC use the newer AMSR-E data? 'We do not use AMSR-E data in our analysis because it is not consistent with our historical data.' Turns out that the AMSR-E data only goes back to 2002, which is probably not long enough for the NSIDC to make sweeping conclusions about melting. The AMSR-E data is updated daily and is available to the public. Thus far, sea ice extent in 2009 is tracking ahead of 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008, so the predictions of an ice-free north pole might be premature."
globalwarming algore science badsummary
news earth
story
Read More 685 comments
Comments: 685
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  Science: Hubble Repair Mission At Risk on Thursday February 19, @04:18AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday February 19, @04:18AM
from the someone-take-out-the-space-trash dept.
Space
MollyB writes "According to Wired, the recent collision of satellites may put the Atlantis shuttle mission to repair Hubble in the 'unacceptable risk' status: 'The spectacular collision between two satellites on Feb. 10 could make the shuttle mission to fix the Hubble Space Telescope too risky to attempt. Before the collision, space junk problems had already upped the Hubble mission's risk of a "catastrophic impact" beyond NASA's usual limits, Nature's Geoff Brumfiel reported today, and now the problem will be worse. Mark Matney, an orbital debris specialist at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas told the publication that even before the collision, the risk of an impact was 1 in 185, which was "uncomfortably close to unacceptable levels" and the satellite collision "is only going to add on to that."'"
kesslersyndrome science space hubble nasa
science space
story
Read More 208 comments
Comments: 208
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  Your Rights Online: NVIDIA Responds To Intel Suit on Thursday February 19, @01:14AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday February 19, @01:14AM
from the chip-wars dept.
The Courts
MojoKid writes "NVIDIA and Intel have always had an interesting relationship, consisting of a dash of mutual respect and a whole lot of under-the-collar disdain. And with situations such as these, it's easy to understand why. NVIDIA today has come forward with a response to a recent Intel court filing in which Intel alleges that the 'four-year-old chipset license agreement the companies signed does not extend to Intel's future generation CPUs with "integrated" memory controllers, such as Nehalem. NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang, had this to say about the whole ordeal: 'We are confident that our license, as negotiated, applies. At the heart of this issue is that the CPU has run its course and the soul of the PC is shifting quickly to the GPU. This is clearly an attempt to stifle innovation to protect a decaying CPU business.'"
court intel nvidia ouch yro
yro court
story
Read More 194 comments
Comments: 194
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  News: Pirate Bay Day 3 — Defense Requests Dismissal on Wednesday February 18, @11:16PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 18, @11:16PM
from the ninja-lawyers dept.
The Courts
Hodejo1 writes "Yesterday was a big day for the Pirate Bay when half of the charges against them were dropped leaving only the lesser charges of assisting making copyrighted material available in place. TorrentFreak is following the English twitter feed of the trial in the wee hours of the night, documenting more missteps by the prosecution. 'The Pirate Bay trial is moving forward rapidly and again the day in court has ended early. On the third day the prosecution presented the amended charges. The defendants all called for acquittal while Carl Lundström's lawyer scored points with the already legendary "King Kong" defense.'"
internet piratebay court
news court
story
Read More 637 comments
Comments: 637
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  Science: Europa Selected As Target of Next Flagship Mission on Wednesday February 18, @09:00PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 18, @09:00PM
from the my-favorite-moon dept.
NASA
volcanopele writes "NASA and the European Space Agency announced today that they have selected the Europa/Jupiter System Mission as the next large mission to the outer solar system. For the last year, the Europa mission has been in competition with a proposal to send a mission to Saturn's moon Titan, as reported on Slashdot earlier. The Europa Mission includes two orbiters: one developed by NASA to orbit the icy moon Europa and another developed by ESA to orbit the solar system's largest moon, Ganymede. Both orbiters would spend up to 2.5 years in orbit around Jupiter before settling into orbit around their respective targets, studying Jupiter's satellites, rings, and of course the planet itself. The mission is scheduled to launch in 2020 and arrive at Jupiter in 2025 and 2026."
space
science nasa
story
Read More 158 comments
Comments: 158
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  Science: Distributed Project To Classify SDSS Galaxies on Wednesday February 18, @08:10PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 18, @08:10PM
from the lend-a-hand dept.
Space
Xandu writes "Be part of a human Beowulf by helping classify millions of galaxies from the SDSS at the Galaxy Zoo. From their about page, "Those involved are directly contributing to scientific research, while getting an opportunity to view the beautiful and varied galaxies that inhabit our universe. Why do we need people to do this, rather than just using a computer? The simple answer is that the human brain is much better at recognizing patterns than a computer. Galaxies are complicated objects that vary in appearance enormously, and yet in some ways they can be very similar. We could write a computer program to classify these galaxies, and many researchers have, but so far none have really done a good enough job. We have not been able to make computers 'see past' the complexity, to reliably identify the similarities that appear obvious to our eyes and brain. For now, and probably for some time yet, people do the best job of classifying galaxies."
science space mechanicalturk beuseful billionsandbillions
science space
story
Read More 33 comments
Comments: 33
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  Technology: Judge Dismisses Google Street View Case on Wednesday February 18, @07:19PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 18, @07:19PM
from the never-go-against-the-google dept.
Google
angry tapir writes "A judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by a Pennsylvania family against Google after the company took and posted images of the outside of their house in its Maps service. The lawsuit, filed in April 2008, drew attention because it sought to challenge Google's right to take street-level photos for its Maps' Street View feature. Judge Amy Reynolds Hay from the US District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania granted Google's request for dismissing the lawsuit because 'the plaintiffs have failed to state a claim under any count.'"
court google
tech google
story
Read More 236 comments
Comments: 236
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  Apple: MacBook's "Unremovable" Battery Easy To Remove on Wednesday February 18, @06:17PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 18, @06:17PM
from the just-unscrew-16-handy-screws dept.
Portables (Apple)
Slatterz writes "Going just a bit further than your average unboxing, someone has stripped a new 17-inch Apple Macbook Pro to its component parts revealing one or two little surprises. The biggest of which is that the built-in battery is easily accessible, requiring the tinkerer to remove just the 13 Philips screws which hold the bottom cover in place, and the three tri-wing security screws which hold the battery in place."
power macbook !easy
apple macbook
story
Read More 449 comments
Comments: 449
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  Technology: 5 Powerline Networking Devices Reviewed on Wednesday February 18, @05:33PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 18, @05:33PM
from the floor-to-floor dept.
Networking
An anonymous reader writes "Most people who can't or won't hardwire for broadband have an obvious alternative: Wi-Fi. Unfortunately, there can be architectural anomalies between floors or even between rooms that can interfere with Wi-Fi signals, resulting in spotty, or even dead, signals. So what do you do? Well, you can try using a powerline device. Computerworld reviewer Bill O'Brien tests powerline units from Belkin, D-Link, Linksys, Netgear and Zyxel, and compares their performance to that of his wired and wireless setups."
networking hardware it
tech networking
story
Read More 144 comments
Comments: 144
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Screenshot-sm   Idle: Student Arrested For Classroom Texting on Wednesday February 18, @04:52PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 18, @04:52PM
from the the-strong-arm-of-the-education-system dept.
Image
A 14-year-old Wisconsin girl was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct after she refused to stop texting during a high school math class. The girl denied having a phone when confronted by a school safety officer, but a female cop found it after frisking her. The Samsung Cricket was recovered "from the buttocks area" of the teenager, according to the police report. The girl was banned from school property for a week, and is scheduled for an April 20 court appearance for a misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge. I applaud the adults involved for their discretion and temperance in this heinous case of texting without permission.
education
idle education
story
Read More 1138 comments
Comments: 1138
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  BSD: DragonFly BSD 2.2 Released on Wednesday February 18, @04:23PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 18, @04:23PM
from the big-essin'-deal dept.
Operating Systems
An anonymous reader writes "DragonFly BSD 2.2 is now available. The second release to feature the HAMMER (versioning, among other things) filesystem — now considered production-ready — it includes 'major stability improvements across the board, new drivers, much better pkgsrc support and integration.' Apart from the CD ISO, this release has a DVD ISO with 'a fully operational X environment,' as well as a bootable USB disk-key image."
bsd os freebsd4update slashdotted
bsd os
story
Read More 43 comments
Comments: 43
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  Mobile: Is the Bar of Soap Tomorrow's Smarterphone? on Wednesday February 18, @04:00PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 18, @04:00PM
from the next-generation-uses-earwax-proximity dept.
Cellphones
Barence writes "Researchers at MIT have developed a gadget that knows whether you want to use it as a camera or smartphone, just by the way you're holding it. So, if you hold the device, dubbed the Bar of Soap, out in front of you like a camera it will automatically bring up an LCD viewfinder. However, if you then switch to holding it as you would a mobile phone, it will bring up a touchscreen keypad instead. The Bar of Soap utilises a three-axis accelerometer and 72 surface sensors to track the position of the user's fingers and its position."
cellphones technology gui dontdropthesoap hardware
mobile cellphones
story
Read More 138 comments
Comments: 138
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  Science: Mars Winds Clean Spirit's Solar Panels Again on Wednesday February 18, @03:12PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday February 18, @03:12PM
from the like-mom-making-the-bed dept.
Mars
Titoxd writes "In a blast from the past, NASA reports that Spirit's solar panels have received a much-needed cleaning courtesy of the Red Planet. The report states, 'The cleaning boosts Spirit's daily energy supply by about 30 watt-hours, to about 240 watt-hours from 210 watt-hours. The rover uses about 180 watt-hours per day for basic survival and communications, so this increase roughly doubles the amount of discretionary power for activities such as driving and using instruments.'"
science mars
science mars
story
Read More 264 comments
Comments: 264

Slashdot Poll

Poll If I find an identifiable bit of satellite debris ...
I will report it to the human authorities pronto.
It will remain a memento for me and my heirs
Two words: eBay, baby -- eBay
I'll use it to gain short-lived local celebrity
Depends whether I find an intact camera.
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:236 | Votes:19393

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