iconSlashdot

Compact Disc Turns 26, Has a Bright Future
javipas writes The Compact Disc was created 26 years ago, but apparently it is as healthy as 15 years ago, when computing versions of this format (CD-ROM, CD-R, CD-RW) made the market explode. Nowadays CD has been replaced in some
Interview Update With Bjarne Stroustrup On C++0x
An anonymous reader writes DevX interviewed Bjarne Stroustrup about C++0x, the new C++ standard that is due in 2009. Bjarne Stroustrup has classified the new features into three categories: Concurrency, Libraries and Language. The changes introduced in Concurrency makes C++
Was Standardizing On JavaScript a Mistake?
snydeq writes Fatal Exceptions Neil McAllister questions the wisdom of standardizing on a single language in the wake of the ECMA Committees decision to abandon ECMAScript 4 in favor of the much less ambitious ECMAScript 3.1, stunting the future of
Timing Technology Behind Olympic Record Results
An anonymous reader writes Weve been on the edge of our seats cheering on the athletes at the Beijing Olympic games — but so often do athletes victories and defeats rely on accurate timing. As the athletes compete on the
Microsoft Applies For Patent On Private Browsing
PhilDEE writes Microsoft is in the process of applying for two patents for a private browsing mode in their next version of Internet Explorer, a feature already present in Safari, among other browsers.Read more of this story at
FEMA Phones Hacked, Calls Mideast and Asia
purplehayes writes A hacker broke into a Homeland Security Department telephone system over the weekend and racked up about $12,000 in calls to the Middle East and Asia. The hacker made more than 400 calls on a Federal Emergency Management
Solar Cells - Made In a Pizza Oven
stylemessiah writes The winner of several Eureka Science Awards in Australia is a crafty chick who devised a way to create solar cells cheaply using a pizza oven, nail polish and an inkjet printer. This was developed to address the
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iconDigg Technology

FCC Order scolds Comcast for changing story on P2P blocking
Surrender, Comcast! declares the FCC in its Order on P2P blocking. The agency also calls on the public to stay vigilant on the issue and aligns itself more closely with the net neutrality movement.
Shapeways: 3D Printing for Everyone (Except Little Kids)
Ever had a really cool idea for something you wanted to build, but you had no way to actually build it? Ever designed a toy or a piece of art that you thought would be a neat thing to have,
How To Block Porn Pictures And Images With SafeSquid Proxy
Administrators can use various methods to block access to websites that are pornographic in nature, like URL Filter, URL Blacklist, Keyword Filter, etc.Follow the procedure below to install Pornographic Image Filter and use it with SafeSquid:
Fast quantum computer building block created
The fastest quantum computer bit that exploits the main advantage of the qubit over the conventional bit has been demonstrated by researchers at University of Michigan, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and the University of California at San Diego.
Microsoft enlists Seinfeld, Gates to battle "Get a Mac" ads
Those Apple Get a Mac ads have long been an annoyance to Microsoft and to Bill Gates in particular. No surprise as an emboldened Apple with rising market share has continued to ratchet up the venomous quips like, fear of
Top 10 YouTube Hacks
Summers ending, and with it goes a certain sense of taking it easier, relaxing a bit at the office—you know, caching up on all that YouTube browsing you skip when theres real work to be done.
The Pirate Bay Appeals Italian Blockade
The Pirate Bay has decided to fight the decision of an Italian judge after it ordered ISPs to block access to the popular tracker. The blocks didn’t prove particularly effective as traffic from Italy only increased but nevertheless, The Pirate
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iconCNET News.com

Will 'Spore' be the greatest game of all-time?
Will Spore be the greatest game of all-time? Don Reisinger explores that possibility and asks you to guess.
Rumored iTunes subscription would be a bargain
According to a tip received by MacDailyNews, Apples considering an iTunes all-you-can-eat subscription for $129.99 a year--thats cheaper than all other subscription services, and would cement iTunes absolute dominance.
Iowa chosen for next Microsoft data center
The software maker will build its fourth U.S. data center in West Des Moines, which is also the hometown of Olympic gold-medal winning gymnast Shawn Johnson.
Turns nabs $15 million for search-like advertising tech
Ad technologies are a hot commodity for investors, given that most of the Internets early ad companies (e.g., DoubleClick) are now owned by one of the Webs search giants. Turn aims to make display ads more measurable and effective.
Salesforce.com shares drop on outlook
Shares fell more than $9, or 15 percent, by mid-day, as analyst expressed concerns about the software as a service companys future revenue.
Is Generation Y going deaf?
With in-ear headphones cranked to 11, members of the younger generation are doing irreparable harm to their hearing. Maybe they dont even know.
Red Hat's JBoss business hits overdrive
Red Hats JBoss business spent two years in the doldrums, but has recently hit an inflection point that is driving it to grow at twice the rate of Red Hats operating system business.
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iconZDNet

What SaaS can teach us about customer service
In the SaaS model, the power is with the customer and vendors need to take a very different approach to both sales and service, heres how to do it says Archie Black, President and CEO of SPS Commerce. Commentary--Software-as-a-Service SaaS
Intel unveils Nehalem 'turbo mode'
At IDF, the chipmaker announced a power-control feature in its new micro architecture, claiming it is pretty compelling for enterprises. Intel unveiled on Tuesday a new aspect of its upcoming microprocessor architecture, which promises better power management and efficiency. Speaking
American Airlines kicks off in-flight Internet service
The worlds largest airline said its passengers on Boeing 767-200 aircraft can get Internet access on nonstop flights between New York and San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Miami. CHICAGO--American Airlines began offering Internet access on long-haul domestic flights on Wednesday,
Android security team appeals to bug hunters
The security team for Googles nascent open-source mobile platform, Android, has attempted to raise its profile with the security community The security team behind Googles mobile platform, Android, has tried to raise its profile among security researchers by appealing for
Overheated iPod nano blamed for three fires
Japans trade ministry said on Tuesday that three fires had been caused by overheating Apple iPod nanos, which it said could be due to a battery defect. TOKYO--Japans trade ministry said on Tuesday that three fires had been caused by
IBM: The mainframe is back
The company claims the mainframe is finding its way into emerging markets and holding strong globally, despite a shortage of related skills among IT workers The mainframe is finding its way into emerging markets and is still holding strong globally,
Torvalds: No picnic to become major Linux coder
The Linux project lead has said new contributors should start small to avoid becoming frustrated with the Linux kernel development process Linux project lead Linus Torvalds has said it is not easy to become a major contributor to the Linux
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iconWired Technology

Storming Sweden in the World's Wildest Prius
Three Swedish gearheads spend eight weeks and $184,275 building the most radical hybrid on the planet to prove anything can be customized.
US Company Sues Nintendo in Wii Wand Patent Suit
A U.S company has filed a number of patent suits against Nintendo, accusing the Japanese gamers hit Wii of infringing on its technology for a handheld three-dimensional pointing device and a display interface system for organizing graphic content on a
Aug. 21, 1986: Volcanic Lake Explodes, Killing Thousands
1986: A deadly cloud of carbon dioxide sweeps down the slopes of an African volcano, smothering more than 1,700 people.Volcanoes can kill in many ways, but this one is pretty weird. A volcanic lake in the West African nation of
Boston Court's Meddling With 'Full Disclosure' Is Unwelcome
In eerily similar cases in the Netherlands and the United States, courts have recently grappled with the computer-security norm of full disclosure, asking whether researchers should be permitted to disclose details of a fare-card vulnerability that allows people to ride
Death by Volcano
: Photo: Austin Post/USGSVolcanoes inspire awe and terror because they can kill in so many ways -- flowing lava, suffocating ash, flood from a released lake, landslides, mudslides, burning gas, shockwaves, earthquakes and tsunamis. A volcano can kill
Review: Fashioning Technology Explains Knitting, LEDs
The latest book from OReilly and Make Magazine explores the fertile intersection of crafting and hardware hacking: Think knitting, plus circuit boards and LEDs.
Flash Creators Jump Into Energy-Savings Game
Greenbox, a startup founded by the creators of Flash, announce the roll-out of its power-consumption-monitoring application. Installed along with networked electrical meters to a limited number of homes by Oklahoma Gas and Electric, the new trial is Greenboxs first move
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iconTom's Hardware

Kanguru's Secure USB Memory Stick
USB drives can be critical when it comes to data security for companies. The Defender from Kanguru only saves data in encrypted form, and enables the remote deletion of content over the Internet in case of theft.
Presented By:
Silent PSUs: Fortron Versus Silverstone
Home theater PCs should be as quiet as possible. Since most of the noise is caused by the fans on the CPU and power supply, we tested two passive power supplies that use no fans.
Making Motherboards The Gigabyte Way
Unless something goes horribly wrong, you only see your motherboard in its final form, decked out with copper cooling and flashing LEDs. Gigabyte showed us how much work goes into getting a board from blank PCB to action-ready.
Overclocking: Tom's Sets World Record
Earlier this year, our counterparts in France set out to break the overclocking record with a Core 2 Quad Q6600 - and they succeeded.
Presented By: Share rich, engaging work anytime, anywhere
  Adobe® Acrobat® 9 Pro Extended software is the complete PDF solution to help business and technical professionals create and share professional work with virtually anyone, anywhere.www.adobe.com/products/acrobatAds by Pheedo
13 Years of Nvidia Graphics Cards
Founded in 1993, Nvidia has had plenty of time to enjoy the ups and downs of our tumultuous business. Learn about everything from NV1 to the companys latest unified shader architecture in our pictorial trip down memory lane.
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iconArs Technica

Comcast to slow down heaviest 'Net users to DSL speeds
Comcast is offering more details about the protocol agnostic throttling solution that will replace its current, FCC-denounced approach to network management. Heavy users will be deprioritized for 10 to 20 minutes at a time.Read More...
Hands on with the next wave of search aggregators
New search tools are making it easier to get to the content and communities you need, and theyre presenting results as more than just boring lists of links. Ars Technica goes hands on with two search aggregators with the hope
Fair use gets a fair shake: YouTube tot to get day in court
A federal judge has refused to dismiss a lawsuit against Universal for its DMCA takedown notice involving video of a dancing toddler. The judge held that copyright holders must take fair use into account before demanding the removal of online
Microsoft buys another $100M in certificates from Novell
Microsoft and Novell have extended their controversial interoperability agreement. Microsoft still espouses unsubstantiated patent rhetoric, but nobody seems to be listening.Read More...
Verizon: we need freedom to delay P2P traffic when necessary
Verizons Chief Technical Officer talks about his philosophy of network management and why building a network that delivers every bit without delay is, in his view, impractical.Read More...
Winning at 3D: an interview with Intel's Pat Gelsinger
Larrabee in the Playstation 4? Nehalem copying Barcelona? Today I had a one-on-one with Pat Gelsinger, Senior Vice President of Intels Digital Enterprise Group, where we touched on these topics and more.Read More...
States rush to dump touch-screen voting systems
States are increasingly abandoning touchscreen voting, scrapping multimillion-dollar systems purchased since 2000.Read More...
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iconHard OCP

Apple Sued For Dropped Calls on iPhone 3G
Who didn’t see this coming? A lawsuit has been filed in Birmingham, AL over dropped calls and download speeds that didn’t meet the advertised rates. The plaintiff is seeking class-action status so that it can represent all consumers who agree
Comcast Plans to Slow Down Heavy Users During Congestion
Comcast just loves to be in the news and piss off consumers. Earlier this month, we reported that the FCC forced Comcast to open up their network and play nice with P2P. Comcast has complied but plans on managing heavy
Nintendo Sued for Patent Infringement on “Wii-mote”
A US company, Hillcrest Laboratories, is suing Nintendo for patent infringement around the Wiimote, the wandlike remote controller packaged with the Wii. Nintendo has not commented on this suit yet. Hillcrest is accusing Nintendo of infringement in four patents dealing
American Airlines Launches In-Flight WiFi Hotspots
American Airlines has won the race to offer WiFi on flights by adding the service on 15 of its jets flying transcontinental routes. The service was developed by Aircell and will cost $12.95 for access. AA is evaluating the service
Pacemaker Cloaking Device in Development
It’s pretty sad when people have to create protection around pacemakers to prevent a hacker attack. In theory, the hacker could use a radio signal shut the pacemaker down or deliver a potentially lethal shock. The cloaking device, which has
ASUS Advanced Overclocking Championship
What do you get when you take 18 European overclockers, a big bottle of liquid Nitrogen, a handful of Core 2 Extreme QX9770 processors, and Radeon 4870x2 CrossFireX? You will have to read up at OC3D to find out. Basically
NVISION 08 Features CUDA Developer Conference
Just as a black hole pulls everything toward it, the NVISION® 08 event in San Jose next week is pulling in experts and practitioners in the field from all over the world. The NVISION 08 visual computing conference, being held
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iconAnandTech

Nehalem - Everything You Need to Know about Intel's New Architecture
Its called the Core i7, but we knew it as Nehalem. We go through the entire micro-architecture and explain the new developments from IDF....
Integrated Graphics - G45 at IDF
Intel opened up about the G45 in their Enhancing the Media Experience presentation today. ...
Intel Developer Forum 2008 - Live! Day 3 Keynote Coverage
Woz and Ratner are speaking today, and we should get some good R&D info later in the keynote. This should last from 11am EST to 12:45pm EST, so not quite as long as yesterday, but hopefully even cooler....
Lucid Hydra 100 - Enabling SLI/CrossFire on Any Platform
In one of the more surprising demos of IDF a small company called Lucid demonstrated its hardware which allows multiple GPUs to be used in tandem without silly driver/platform restrictions or the use of software profiles. It just...works. ...
Intel Developer Forum 2008 - Live! Day 2 Keynote Coverage
Todays IDF keynotes, covered in real time, dealing with everything from mobility and digital home to software....
Intel Nehalem Demo Systems
Intel had a number of Nehalem systems up and running at IDF. Clock speeds are unknown but there are tons of threads being spawned. The desktop platforms feature X58 motherboards with 6 DDR3 DIMM slots for Nehalems 3 channels. Also
Intel Developer Forum 2008 - Live! Nehalem, Gelsinger Keynote Coverage
Pat Gelsinger and Dadi Perlmutter are on stage and are going to be talking about everything from Nehalem to Larrabee and Atom....
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iconNewsforge

Getting Mono and MySQL to play together politely
When I first used Mono, shortly after its first appearance in 2004, one of my most important requirements was to get connected to a MySQL back end. This was quickly achieved at the time with the ByteFX data connector. Following
phpMinAdmin is a powerful minimalist MySQL editor
If youve ever worked with and manipulated MySQL databases, chances are youve used phpMyAdmin to manage your databases from a Web interface. But phpMyAdmin can be a little complex; if you want a lightweight alternative, try phpMinAdmin. Its easier to
Help your favorite "public interest" free software project win $10,000
Nominations are now open for the Antonio Pizzigati Prize for Software in the Public Interest. The winner could be someone you know, or someone whose work you admire, but dont mull over your recommendation too long -- entries must be
Scheduling jobs based on filesystem activity with incron
There are numerous documents, tutorials and guides detailing the workings and usage of cron, the de facto tool for scheduling jobs on Linux. While traditional cron jobs are executed at set times, inotify cron, or incron, is a cron clone
Foresight Linux: Two out of three's not bad
According to its past and present marketing, Foresight Linux has three claims to fame: Its user-friendliness, its use of the Conary package management system, and its role as a showcase for the latest in GNOME. In practice, its latest 2.0.4
Find the DVD containing those files with VVV
The Virtual Volumes View (VVV) project lets you index your data DVDs and perform searches to figure out whether a given file is backed up and what disc contains it. If you routinely back up a large amount of data
Open options for cloud computing
Some cloud computing vendors, such as 3tera and Nirvani, push their own proprietary platforms and tools, which forces adopters to limit their options and work in a restricted or closed architecture. When these established vendors say cloud, they mean their
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iconO'Reilly Network

So You Want to Be a Travel Photographer? Rick Sammon Shows You How!
Veteran travel photographer Rick Sammon shares his tips for shooting memorable images when on the road. One of the cool things about digital SLR cameras (and top of the line cameras) is that you can control the shutter speed to
boingboing: ETech 2009 Call for Proposals: "Living, Reinvented."
ETech veteran Cory Doctorows kind words on this years conference and the Call for Proposals: The call for proposals for OReilly Emerging Tech 2009 has just gone up: Living, Reinvented. I was involved in every ETech from the first P2PCon
Interview with David Heinemeier Hansson: Rails Culture, Scaling Basecamp, and Building Successf(...)
In this video interview, DHH discusses the current state of Ruby on Rails adoption. Who is using Rails? How was the culture changed over the past five years? Hansson also comments on the technologies that are catching his attention and
MySQL Drizzle Project
I vaguely remember hearing/reading something about the MySQL Drizzle project among the news emerging from OSCON last month. But, it didnt grab my attention enough at the time (I thought it was just something compete with SQLite), so I didnt
dekePod Episode 004: Stretching a Photo in Illustrator
Have you ever wanted to stretch a photos background but leave the foreground unchanged? Or turn a horizontal photo into a vertical one without making a mess of it? You
In Search of GIMP for the Mac
I wanted to install a free (Open Source if possible) image editor on my MacBook. After looking around, I returned to look at GIMP whose multi-window interface always bothered me. Heres what I found about GIMP for Mac OS X
Scaling Distorted Peaks in BIAS Peak
While editing a podcast in BIAS Peak 6 recently, I was disturbed to hear the audio distorting even though the peak levels were below 100%. Turns out the culprit was a stealthy slider.
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iconVNU Net

Boulder bunny's plight highlights threat to ski industry
Danny Bradbury, BusinessGreen, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 08:41:00 Green groups push for Pika to be included on Endangered Species List as falling snow levels impact its native environment Two lawsuits filed this week to protect a simple mountain rabbit
Is it time for wind turbines atop the Empire State Building?
James Murray, BusinessGreen, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 09:18:00 Mayor Bloomberg invites proposals for New York renewable energy projects New Yorks Mayor Michael Bloomberg this week unveiled an ambitious renewable energy strategy that could
Gagging order lifted on subway hackers
Shaun Nichols in San Francisco, vnunet.com, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 21:08:00 MIT students allowed to share research on card system flaws A US judge has lifted the restraining order on a group of
APCIMS calls on govt for simpler CGT rules
AccountancyAge.com, Accountancy Age, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 07:50:00 APCIMS calls on the government to simplify CGT rules which penalise long term shareholders The Association of Private Client Investment Managers and Stockbrokers (APCIMS) has urged the government to simplify capital
Fresh warning govt finances face deeper slide
AccountancyAge.com, Accountancy Age, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 08:01:00 There are fresh warnings from the City of government finances facing deeper than forecast slide into the red Concerns over the precarious state of the
KPMG warns of looming transfer pricing issues
AccountancyAge.com, Accountancy Age, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 07:53:00 The latest KPMG report warns tax authorities are preparing to enforce transfer pricing regulations A newly released KPMG report warns tax authorities are seeking to enforce transfer pricing regulations and are
Deloitte to merge with Scott Rankin & Gardiner
AccountancyAge.com, Accountancy Age, Thursday 21 August 2008 at 07:45:00 Deloitte & Touche in Canada and Ottowa-based Scott Rankin & Gardener are merging Deloitte & Touche in Canada has signed a memorandum of understanding with Ottawa-based Scott Rankin & Gardiner to
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iconKuro5hin

Presenting... MichaelCrawford's Ideal K5 Diary
Announcing: WakeRiteTM Alarm Clock by MichaelCrawford in MichaelCrawfords Diary Sun 08, 2008 at 07:16 PM EST Tags: MichaelCrawford, WakeRiteTM, Sleep, Alarm Clocks, Geometric Visions, Ogg Frog, GoingWare, Schizoaffective Disorder (all tags) Good news everybody! In my ongoing quest to manage
MAC AND CHEESE
YOU THINK YOU KNOW MAC AND CHEESE NO YOU DO NOT WELL MAYBE YOU DO HERE IS HOW IT GOES DOWN
Why You Need to Vote on Stories
We look like them, but theres a difference... Kuro5hin.org looks like a lot of other weblogs you see in your everyday clicking. But there is one important difference in how we operate here, that you may not be familiar with,
Russia did the right thing in Georgia
So the first analyses of the Russia-Georgia tussle over South Ossetia are being published. Dont be fooled by the Western - especially French and German - media consensus (for example, this article on the ever dumb Times screaming OMG Russian
This god will not perish shamefully
Its late at night and the apartment is silent. Outside, a light rain falls, easily mistaken for fog. You set down your voice recorder, clicking it on, a slight raise of the left eyebrow the only sign of asking for
The Spoils of... MUST?!
I had to run down a bottle of one step sanitizer for my pilsner I had fermented at 90F. Rather than let it go to waste, when I took the lid off the fermenter there were really neat apple, fruit,
Review: The Dark Knight
It is little wonder that The Dark Knight has done so well in modern America, generating huge returns for its investors, and spurring talk even before its release of potential Academy Awards. This is not because the dark setting and