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  IT: Shaming Russia Into Action On Cyber Crime on Saturday March 07, @12:14AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday March 07, @12:14AM
from the stand-in-the-corner-until-you're-sorry dept.
Security
krebsatwpost writes "The Washington Post ran a piece earlier this week that confronts the myth that cyber criminal gangs in Russia and Eastern Europe avoid attacking their own, pointing to numerous examples of late that counter this common misconception. The story draws on data from Team Cyrmu about distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDoS) that target Russian and E. European organizations, intel from McAfee about Russian banks and federal agencies that appear to be under control over cyber gangs there, and tens of gigabytes of data stolen via keyloggers that disproportionately impact Russian systems, including that of a top Gazprom official. The piece begins: 'If you ask security experts why more cyber criminals aren't brought to justice, the answer you will probably hear is that US authorities simply aren't getting the cooperation they need from law enforcement officials in Russia and other Eastern European nations, where some of the world's most active cyber criminal gangs are thought to operate with impunity. But I wonder whether authorities in those countries would be any more willing to pursue cyber crooks in their own countries if they were forced to confront just how deeply those groups have penetrated key government and private computer networks in those regions?'"
security russia it
it security
story
Read More... 17 comments
Comments: 17
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  Technology: Symantec Support Gone Rogue? on Friday March 06, @10:12PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday March 06, @10:12PM
from the less-than-helpful dept.
Software
DigitalDame2 writes "PCMag Security Analyst Neil Rubenking has always praised Symantec's tech support. Lately, though, a number of readers have reported problems with chat support, so he investigated. Rubenking was trying to install Norton 360 version 3.0 on a malware-infested system when the computer crashed with a blue screen error. He connected with Symantec tech support and was told that they could fix the problem, but for a fee of $100! (Here is the transcript and screen-captures of the chat.) Even more, Symantec support suggested that he use a malware-removal tool that wasn't even made by Symantec."
security software
tech software
story
Read More... 111 comments
Comments: 111
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  News: Digital TV Coupon Program Under Way Again on Friday March 06, @08:08PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday March 06, @08:08PM
from the flushing-money-down-a-digital-toilet dept.
Television
An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from CNet: "Federal regulators said Thursday they are going into 'search and rescue' mode to help the millions of consumers unprepared for the phased transition to digital television, which culminates with the June 12 transition deadline. The millions of consumers waiting for coupons for digital converter box coupons will finally receive them within the next two and a half weeks, thanks to emergency funding for the coupon program provided in the stimulus package, said Bernadette McGuire-Rivera, an administrator for the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. The NTIA is also ratcheting up its outreach to consumers most likely to be unprepared for the transition... FCC commissioners said their agency is also intensifying its outreach, but they acknowledged that while one third of television stations have already dropped their analog signals, the hardest part is yet to come." We previously discussed the DTV coupon program when it ran out of money in January. The $650 million from the stimulus packages adds to the $1.3 billion that's already been spent.
tv government moneytoburn yawn facepalm
news tv
story
Read More... 95 comments
Comments: 95
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  Hardware: Filmmaker Working On Eye-Socket Camera on Friday March 06, @07:09PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday March 06, @07:09PM
from the take-two-they're-small dept.
Robotics
An anonymous reader writes "Wired has a story about Rob Spence, a Canadian filmmaker who plans to have a mini camera installed in his prosthetic eye. 'A camera module will have to be connected to a transmitter inside the prosthetic eye that can broadcast the captured video footage. To boost the signal, he says he can wear another transmitter on his belt. A receiver attached to a hard drive in a backpack could capture that information and then send it to another device that uploads everything to a web site in real time. ... Even though his project is still in its early stages, Spence says many people have already told him they wouldn't be comfortable being filmed. "People are more scared of a center-left documentary maker with an eye than the 400 ways they are filmed every day at the school, the subway, the mall," he says. He hopes he will help get people thinking about privacy, how surveillance cameras and the footage they record are being used and accessed.'" Spence runs a blog for the 'Eyeborg Project,' as he calls it, and has recently posted a video about the progress they're making.
goodeyeborg hardware robot technology borg
hardware robot
story
Read More... 75 comments
Comments: 75
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  Technology: Dreamweaver Is Dying; Long Live Drupal! on Friday March 06, @06:18PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @06:18PM
from the view-askew dept.
The Internet
Barence writes "Here's an interesting blog post by a designer who reckons Dreamweaver is dying. It's not Dreamweaver's fault, though. Nor is the problem Adobe and its development team — the last Dreamweaver CS4 version was the most impressive release in years. Moreover, although Microsoft Expression Web poses a far more credible threat than FrontPage could muster, Dreamweaver remains the best HTML/CSS page-based editor available. The real problem for Dreamweaver and for its users is that the nature of the web is changing dramatically."
internet gui software
tech internet
story
Read More... 167 comments
Comments: 167
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  Technology: S3 Linux Driver Outperforms Its Windows Twin In Nexuiz on Friday March 06, @05:46PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @05:46PM
from the battle-of-the-benchmarks dept.
Graphics
An anonymous reader writes "Chrome Center has done some benchmarks with the proprietary S3 Chrome 400/500 Driver on Linux and Windows. They compared Nexuiz frame rates on a Phenom II system with a S3 430 GT — the surprising result: The Linux driver outperforms its Windows equivalent, offering frame rates about twice as high on average. The question now: Is the Linux driver that good or the Windows driver that bad?"
linux graphics hardware s3 !tech
tech graphics
story
Read More... 51 comments
Comments: 51
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  Hardware: Guitar Hero, On a Real Guitar, To Hit Shelves In 2009 on Friday March 06, @05:31PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @05:31PM
from the it-looks-like-you're-playing-a-guitar dept.
Input Devices
An anonymous reader writes "The Minneapolis Star Tribune features an article (with photos) about a prototype electric guitar that doubles as a Guitar Hero controller. It is not just another guitar-shaped controller with buttons: it is an actual, playable guitar, shown in-action. The startup company, Zivix, LLC, intends to bring the product to store shelves in 2009. Web searches indicate that the company may have raised around $800K for the venture. The company is also working on technology that enables finger sensing on a real guitar that would allow your computer to teach you how to play chords or evolve into a future guitar synthesizer."
games inputdev casiodg100
hardware inputdev
story
Read More... 86 comments
Comments: 86
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  Entertainment: Is Salacious Content Driving E-Book Sales? on Friday March 06, @04:46PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @04:46PM
from the let-me-take-one-lust-driven-guess dept.
Books
narramissic writes "Having already abandoned ebooks once, Barnes & Noble is jumping back into ebooks with the purchase this week of ebook seller Fictionwise. Why is the format suddenly hot? Look no further than the top 10 Fictionwise bestsellers, says blogger Peter Smith. Once again it seems like 'porn is blazing a path to a new media format. Of the top 10 bestsellers under the 'Multiformat' category, nine are tagged 'erotica' and the last is 'dark fantasy.' Need more proof that folks (let's take a leap and call them women) who read 'bodice rippers' like the privacy of ebooks? Author Samantha Lucas (who writes for publishers like Cobblestone Press and Siren Publishing) tells Smith that she sells almost all of her novels in ebook format."
books media entertainment porn pornovation
entertainment books
story
Read More... 160 comments
Comments: 160
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  Technology: Windows 7 Kill Switch For IE Confirmed — For More Apps, Too on Friday March 06, @04:03PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @04:03PM
from the for-just-a-few-dollars-more dept.
Windows
CWmike writes "Microsoft has confirmed that users will be able to remove its IE8 browser, as well as several other integrated applications, from Windows 7. Jack Mayo, a group program manager on the Windows team, listed in a blog post the applications that can be switched off. They include Internet Explorer 8, Fax and Scan, handwriting recognition, Windows DVD Maker, Windows Gadget Platform, Windows Media Player, Windows Media Center, Windows Search, and XPS Viewer and Services. He explained that the files associated with those applications and features are not actually deleted from the hard drive. The public beta of Windows 7 does not include the ability to 'kill' said apps. But a pirated copy of Windows 7 Build 7048 includes the new removal options, and has been leaked on the Internet." (We mentioned the reported ability to turn off IE8 yesterday as well.)
windows
tech windows
story
Read More... 175 comments
Comments: 175
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  Ask Slashdot: Can SSDs Be Used For Software Development? on Friday March 06, @03:20PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @03:20PM
from the real-world-odds dept.
Data Storage
hackingbear writes "I'm considering buying a current-generation SSD to replace my external hard disk drive for use in my day-to-day software development, especially to boost the IDE's performance. Size is not a great concern: 120GB is enough for me. Price is not much of a concern either, as my boss will pay. I do have concerns on the limitations of write cycles as well as write speeds. As I understand, the current SSDs overcome it by heuristically placing the writes randomly. That would be good enough for regular users, but in software development, one may have to update 10-30% of the source files from Subversion and recompile the whole project, several times a day. I wonder how SSDs will do in this usage pattern. What's your experience developing on SSDs?"
hardware storage letmegooglethatforyou
askslashdot storage
story
Read More... 372 comments
Comments: 372
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  Entertainment: Watchmen Watched on Friday March 06, @02:33PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Friday March 06, @02:33PM
from the because-i-can dept.
Movies
In a blatant attempt to make my movie-going a valid business expense, I'm putting together some notes on Watchmen, and providing a place for you all to discuss it. The first thing I want to say is that I had high hopes: If you ask any serious comic book nerd what the most important book is, they will probably give you one of two answers, and "Watchmen" is the right one. So really Snyder, the director of 300, could only do wrong. Fortunately for me, he was very true to the book: just like 300, many sequences are shot-for-shot from the comics. Some stuff didn't make it, and the new ending has a different meaning to me (one that really isn't as satisfying, but is certainly cleaner). But what I can't say is if it was a good movie or not. I sorta wish I could get an impartial opinion of someone who isn't a nutty fan of the book to tell me how it stands as a movie. I imagine a bit slow, wordy and maybe a bit confusing in parts. I'll leave full reviews to others, but I enjoyed the picture and suspect you will too.
movies entertainment taxwriteoff
entertainment movies
story
Read More... 338 comments
Comments: 338
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  Apple: Apple Mac Mini 1TB Upgrade — Not Easy But Possible on Friday March 06, @02:20PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @02:20PM
from the check-out-that-hot-centerfold dept.
Desktops (Apple)
designperfection9 writes "The new Mac mini is all well and good, but anybody hoping for gobfuls of extra capacity will come away disappointed. Apple's entry-level mini gets 120GB of storage, and it costs $175 to take that up the official 320GB maximum. Happily iFixit decided to step in and take matters into their own hands, with a nine-page pictorial guide to fitting your Mac mini with 1TB of storage." They're also offering a kit to accomplish the same end for $250 — that seems high to me now that 1TB external drives can be had for quite a bit less, and require no putty-knife action to install.
hardware mac storage apple
apple mac
story
Read More... 74 comments
Comments: 74
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  Hardware: Boxee Hack Restores Hulu Support (Sort Of) on Friday March 06, @01:47PM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @01:47PM
from the black-marker-on-the-edge dept.
Media
DeviceGuru writes "Boxee has restored support for Hulu, along with several other enhancements, to its free media center platform for PCs and Macs. The modification, a hack to Boxee's RSS feed functionality, involves having Boxee users enable the support themselves by cutting/pasting URLs from Hulu's RSS feed page into their account on Boxee's website. It works, but one can't help wondering how it's really different from Boxee's original — superior — Hulu support. Oh, the games media companies play!"
hardware media tv entertainment
hardware media
story
Read More... 70 comments
Comments: 70
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  Your Rights Online: Oklahoma, Vatican Take Opposite Tacks On Evolution on Friday March 06, @01:04PM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @01:04PM
from the little-communicating-across-the-divide dept.
Censorship
nizcolas writes "Notable evolutionary biologist, author, and speaker Richard Dawkins was recently invited to speak on the campus of the University of Oklahoma as part of the school's celebration of Charles Darwin. However, Oklahoma lawmakers are working to silence Dawkins with the passage of House Bill 1015 (RTF), which reads in part: '... the University of Oklahoma ... has invited as a public speaker on campus, Richard Dawkins of Oxford University, whose published opinions, as represented in his 2006 book "The God Delusion," and public statements on the theory of evolution demonstrate an intolerance for cultural diversity and diversity of thinking and are views that are not shared and are not representative of the thinking of a majority of the citizens of Oklahoma ...'" Pending legal action, Dawkins is set to speak tonight at 7 pm. (Luckily, we no longer live in the era of Bertrand Russell's court-ordered dismissal on moral grounds from the College of the City of New York.) And reader thms sends word of the Vatican's Darwin conference (program): "The conference, marking the 150th anniversary of the publication of "The Origin of Species," has been criticized by advocates of Creationism or Intelligent Design for not inviting them. The Muslim creationist Harun Yahya, most famous for his Atlas of Creation, also complained about not being invited."
censorship idiocracy science
yro censorship
story
Read More... 876 comments
Comments: 876
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  Technology: GM Cornered Into Defending the Volt on Friday March 06, @12:20PM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @12:20PM
from the heavy-to-carry-around dept.
Transportation
Al notes a story in Technology Review reporting on a CMU study (now over a month old) claiming that the Volt doesn't make economic sense, and GM's response. The study suggests that hybrids with large batteries offering up to 40 miles of range before an on-board generator kicks in simply cost too much for the gas savings to work out (PDF). Al writes: "Unsurprisingly, GM disputes the claims, saying 'Our battery team is already starting work on new concepts that will further decrease the cost of the Volt battery pack quite substantially in a second-generation Volt pack.' Interestingly, however, GM admits that the tax credits for plug-in hybrids will be crucial to making the volt successful. Without those credits, would an electric vehicle like the Volt be viable?"
power money transportation earth
tech transportation
story
Read More... 672 comments
Comments: 672
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  Science: ISS's Node 3 Might Be Named "Colbert" on Friday March 06, @11:35AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @11:35AM
from the sure-he's-a-star-but dept.
NASA
Panzor writes "NASA is running a contest to name the new addition to the space station, Node 3. The polls are open until March 20. The selection that is getting the most votes is 'Suggest your own,' and the leading name besides the official four (Earthrise, Legacy, Serenity, and Venture) is 'Colbert.' Comedian Stephen Colbert suggested on the air that fans write in his name. On March 5th, his vote count passed that of Xenu and Colbert pronounced himself Scientology's 'Galactic Overlord.'"
humor space nasa idle bob
science nasa
story
Read More... 250 comments
Comments: 250
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  Developers: Congress Mulls API For Congressional Data on Friday March 06, @10:47AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @10:47AM
from the it's-a-start dept.
Programming
Amerika sends in a Wired blog post on the desire in Congress to make data on lawmaking more easily available to the public. The senator who introduced the language into an omnibus appropriations bill wants feedback on the best way to make (e.g.) the Library of Congress's Thomas data more available — an API or bulk downloads, or both. Some comments on the blog posting call for an authenticated versioning system so we can know unequivocally how any particular language made its way into a bill. "Congress has apparently listened to the public's complaints about lack of convenient access to government data. The new Omnibus Appropriations Bill includes a section, introduced by Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.), that would mark the first tangible move toward making federal legislative data available to the public in bulk, so third parties can mash it up and redistribute it in innovative and accessible ways. This would include all the data currently distributed through the Library of Congress's Thomas web site — bill status and summary information, lists of sponsors, tracking timelines, voting records, etc."
internet government programming usa svn
developers programming
story
Read More... 117 comments
Comments: 117
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  Science: Scale Models Can "Compute" Casimir Forces on Friday March 06, @10:03AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @10:03AM
from the by-analogy dept.
Power
KentuckyFC writes "Place two conducting parallel plates a few nanometres apart and the well-known but difficult-to-measure Casimir force will push them together. The force depends crucially on the shape of the plates but nobody is exactly sure how. That's because calculations with anything other than flat plates are fiendishly difficult and measurements are even harder. Now a group at MIT has come up with an ingenious new way to investigate Casimir forces. What the team has noticed is a mathematical analogy between the Casimir force acting on microscopic bodies in a vacuum and the electromagnetic behavior of macroscopic bodies floating in a conducting fluid. Their idea is to build a centimeter-scale metal model of the system they want to investigate, place it in salt water, and bombard it with microwaves and see what happens. The team says the experiment does not measure the force on the scale model but instead a quantity that is mathematically related to the force. So the experiment is not a simulator but actually an analog computer that calculates the force (abstract). What's exciting is that the method should for the first time give researchers a way of testing nano-machines designed to exploit the Casimir force."
science power mitlove zero theforce
science power
story
Read More... 127 comments
Comments: 127
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  News: America's New CIO Loves Google on Friday March 06, @09:17AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @09:17AM
from the government-in-the-clouds dept.
Government
theodp writes "On Thursday, Barack Obama tapped Vivek Kundra for the post of Federal CIO, giving him responsibility for establishing and overseeing enterprise architecture across the federal government. So what might that look like? Well, little more than a month ago Kundra was slated to sing the praises of Google Apps to government officials in a webcast. A Kundra quote from the presentation slides: 'Why should I spend millions on enterprise apps when I can do it [with Google] at one-tenth cost and ten times the speed? It's a win-win for me.' You can follow Kundra's love affair with Google on YouTube, from his announcement of the Google-Washington DC partnership he brokered through a co-starring role with a Google attorney on a video pitching Google-enabled technology for the Obama Administration. Not surprisingly, some say Obama's choice of a Google-party-goer who worships Google could cause big headaches for Microsoft."
google it government
news government
story
Read More... 203 comments
Comments: 203
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  Your Rights Online: UK Company Sold Workers' Secret Data on Friday March 06, @08:29AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday March 06, @08:29AM
from the art-of-the-blacklist dept.
Privacy
krou writes "The BBC is reporting that the Information Commissioner's Office has shut down a company in the UK for a serious breach of the Data Protection Act. It claims that the company, The Consulting Association in Droitwich, Worcs, ran a secret system that it repeatedly denied existed for 15 years, selling workers' confidential data, including union activities, to building firms, allowing potential employers to unlawfully vet job applicants. About 3,213 workers were in the database, and other information included data on personal relationships, political affiliations, and employment histories. More than 40 firms are believed to have used the service, paying a £3,000 annual fee, and each of them will be investigated, too." The article says that The Consulting Association faces a £5,000 fine — after pulling in £1.8 million over 15 years with its illegal blacklist.
business privacy uk crazykingdom
yro privacy
story
Read More... 116 comments
Comments: 116
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  Science: Illinois Declares Pluto a Planet on Friday March 06, @07:44AM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @07:44AM
from the after-ruling-out-pebble-and-mailing-tube dept.
Space
The Bad Astronomer writes "The legislators in Illinois, always on the lookout for more places to find voters, have passed a resolution declaring Pluto is a planet. I'm not sure what else can be said here, except that — besides overstepping their jurisdiction just a wee bit — they make a couple of scientific howlers in the resolution itself."
humor space usa idiocracy
science space
story
Read More... 475 comments
Comments: 475
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  Games: ScummVM 0.13.0 Delivers New Adventure Games on Friday March 06, @06:16AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday March 06, @06:16AM
from the ever-expanding-selection dept.
Emulation (Games)
KingofGnG writes "The classics, by definition, never go out of fashion, let alone if they are the graphic adventures of past decades. The preferred tool of true adventurers is ScummVM, software that works as an interpreter between data files of such adventures and modern operating systems. 6 months after the release of version 0.12.0, developers have now delivered a new main release of the virtual machine, which includes novelties both for the interface and supported games."
emulation games threepwood
games emulation
story
Read More... 66 comments
Comments: 66
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  Your Rights Online: UK School Introduces Facial Recognition on Friday March 06, @05:10AM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @05:10AM
from the excuse-me-while-I-register-my-delight dept.
Privacy
Penguin_me writes "A UK school has quietly introduced new facial recognition systems for registering students in and out of school: 'HIGH-TECH facial recognition technology has swept aside the old-fashioned signing of the register at a school. Sixth-formers will now have their faces scanned as they arrive in the morning at the City of Ely Community College. It is one of the first schools in the UK to trial the new technology with its students. Face Register uses the latest high-tech gadgets to register students in and out of school in just 1.5 seconds.'"
privacy technology security bigbrother
yro privacy
story
Read More... 199 comments
Comments: 199
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  Games: A Look At the AI of Empire: Total War and F.E.A.R. 2 on Friday March 06, @03:33AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday March 06, @03:33AM
from the entertainingly-foolish dept.
PC Games (Games)
mr_sifter writes "The newly released Empire: Total War and F.E.A.R. 2 have both been praised for their excellent AI. In this feature, Bit-Tech talks to the developers behind these games about how they handled the challenges of creating Empire's armies of thousands of AI soldiers and F.E.A.R. 2's aggressive teams of military operatives. The discussion also talks about how game AI is 'smoke and mirrors' compared to research AI, and looks at the difficulty of improving the quality of game AI." We talked about F.E.A.R. 2's engine and AI back in December as well.
games pcgames smokeandmirrors
games pcgames
story
Read More... 56 comments
Comments: 56
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  Your Rights Online: Timetable App Developer Gets Nastygram From Transit Sydney on Friday March 06, @02:02AM

Posted by timothy on Friday March 06, @02:02AM
from the didn't-get-the-gift-horse-memo dept.
Government
mikesd81 writes "ZDNet Australia writes that NSW state corporation RailCorp has threatened a Sydney software developer with legal action if he fails to withdraw a train timetable application that is currently the second-most-popular application in its category in Apple's App Store. Alvin Singh created Transit Sydney after he began teaching himself how to program in Cocoa Mobile. Within days of its Feb 18 release, Singh received a cease and desist notice from Rail Corporation NSW, the government body that administers Sydney's CityRail network. The email states: 'I advise that copyright in all CityRail timetables is owned by RailCorp. ... Any use of these timetables in a manner which breaches copyright by a third party can only occur through the grant of a suitable licence by RailCorp.'"
transportation government iphone amorality bs
yro government
story
Read 1032 More Bytes... 356 comments
Comments: 356
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  Games: Beatles Rock Band Game Coming In September on Friday March 06, @01:13AM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday March 06, @01:13AM
from the i-think-i've-heard-of-them dept.
Music
An anonymous reader writes with news that The Beatles: Rock Band has gotten a release date: Sept. 9th. Today's announcement also included details about the contents of the game. Quoting Kotaku: "The Beatles: Rock Band will allow fans to pick up the guitar, bass, mic or drums and 'experience The Beatles extraordinary catalog of music through gameplay that takes players on a journey through the legacy and evolution of the band's legendary career,' according to the release. The game will also have a limited number of new hardware offerings modeled after instruments used by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr throughout their career."
games music
games music
story
Read More... 53 comments
Comments: 53
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  Technology: 9 Browsers Compared For Speed and Features on Thursday March 05, @10:57PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday March 05, @10:57PM
from the you-forgot-konqui-and-galeon dept.
Software
notthatwillsmith writes "Counting public betas and release candidates, there are a whopping nine different web browsers out today with enough market share to be considered mainstream. Maximum PC explains the differences between the browsers, future and present, so that you can make a more informed decision about the primary tool you use to browse the web. From the rendering engines used to the features that set the different browsers apart, this is a comprehensive, blow-by-blow battle between Safari 3, Internet Explorer 7, Firefox 3, Opera 9.6, Google Chrome, Firefox 3.1, IE 8, Safari 4, and Opera 10."
internet software seamonkey konqueror opera
tech software
story
Read More... 327 comments
Comments: 327
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  IT: Australian Gov't May Employ a Homegrown Quantum Key System on Thursday March 05, @08:04PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday March 05, @08:04PM
from the lasers-spin-counterclockwise-there dept.
Security
mask.of.sanity writes "The Australian government is trialling a new Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) system built by Aussie scientists. QKD is considered the world's toughest security because the slightest attempt to intercept the one time keys, coded into lasers at the quantum level, will disrupt the beam. The technology differs from current cryptography tech primarily because it's cheap. Well, less than the $US100k price tag of rival systems. It uses off-the-shelf networking gear instead of proprietary technology, and is built on open standards, so it's easier to install. The random key is encoded at the quantum level in the sidebeam in the phase and amplitude, or brightness and colour, of a highly tuned laser beam. The creators, who built the system in part for their Ph.Ds, said it can be used to transport the most sensitive data like critical infrastructure and secret commercial IP. The days of hand-delivered security keys are numbered."
security bruce australia
it security
story
Read More... 138 comments
Comments: 138
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  Hardware: Nvidia Mulls Cheap, Integrated x86 Chip on Thursday March 05, @06:38PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday March 05, @06:38PM
from the putting-integration-together dept.
Intel
CWmike writes "Nvidia is considering developing an integrated chip based on the x86 architecture for use in devices such as netbooks and mobile Internet devices, said Michael Hara, vice president of investor relations at Nvidia during a speech that was webcast from the Morgan Stanley Technology Conference this week. Nvidia has already developed an integrated chip called Tegra, which combines an Arm processor, a GeForce graphics core and other components on a single chip. The chips are aimed at small devices such as smartphones and MIDs, and will start shipping in the second half of this year. 'Tegra, by any definition, is a complete computer-on-chip, and the requirements of that market are such that you have to be very low power and very small but highly efficient,' Hara said. 'Someday, it's going to make sense to take the same approach in the x86 market as well.'"
hardware portables intel
hardware intel
story
Read More... 204 comments
Comments: 204
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  Your Rights Online: Sheriff Sues Craiglist For Prostitution Ads on Thursday March 05, @05:50PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday March 05, @05:50PM
from the shameful-waste-of-tax-money dept.
The Courts
Amerika writes "Craigslist is 'the single largest source of prostitution in the nation,' according to Cook County, Illinois Sheriff Thomas Dart. He has announced that he's filing a lawsuit against the popular classifieds site. Craigslist says it's determined to prevent criminal activity." NewYorkCountryLawyer adds a link to the 28-page complaint (PDF), which "alleges that Craigslist maintains 21 classifications of sex-for-hire, coded as 'w4m,' 'm4m,' 'm4w,' etc." and that it has facilitated child prostitution and kidnapping and human trafficking.
court politics privacy
yro court
story
Read More... 666 comments
Comments: 666

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