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  Science: Methane On Mars May Indicate Living Planet on Thursday January 15, @03:11PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 15, @03:11PM
from the or-a-big-bean-dinner dept.
Mars
Riding with Robots writes "NASA is announcing today that the definitive detection of methane in the Martian atmosphere means the planet is still alive, at least geologically, and perhaps even biologically. 'Methane is quickly destroyed in the Martian atmosphere in a variety of ways, so our discovery of substantial plumes of methane in the northern hemisphere of Mars indicates some ongoing process is releasing the gas,' said one agency scientist. The gas was detected with observations made over over several Martian years with NASA telescopes at Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Both biological and geological processes could explain the methane."
space mars overover littlegreenalgae solaris
science mars
story
Read More 30 comments
Comments: 30
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  News: Breathalyzer Source Code Ruling Upheld on Thursday January 15, @02:22PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 15, @02:22PM
from the show-your-work-please dept.
The Courts
dfn_deux writes "In a follow up to a 2005 story where Florida judge Doug Henderson ruled that breathalyzer evidence in more than 100 drunk driving cases would be inadmissible as evidence at trial, the Second District Court of Appeal and Circuit Court has ruled on Tuesday to uphold the 2005 ruling requiring the manufacturer of the Intoxilyzer 5000, Kentucky-based CMI Inc, to release source code for their breathalyzer equipment to be examined by witnesses for the defense of those whom are standing trial with breathalyzer test result being used as evidence against them. '"The defendant's right to a fair trial outweighed the manufacturer's claim of a trade secret," Henderson said Tuesday. In response to the ruling defense attorney, Mark Lipinski, who represents seven defendants challenging the source codes, said the state likely will be forced to reduce charges — or drop the cases entirely.' ... What this really means is that outside corporations cannot sell equipment to the state of Florida and expect to hide the workings of their machine by saying they are trade secret. It means the state has to give full disclosure concerning important and critical aspects of the case."
software court usa haha hooray
news court
story
Read More 136 comments
Comments: 136
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  Technology: PC Sales Slump Over Economic Crisis on Thursday January 15, @01:38PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday January 15, @01:38PM
from the what've-you-bought-lately dept.
Businesses
nandemoari writes "The damage isn't just limited to the United States. Shipments of PCs in Europe, the Mid-East, and Africa dipped to records posted around the turn of the century. It was even worse in Asia, which according to Gartner, posted its worst growth rate ever — just 1.8 per cent. Within the industry, desktops took the hardest hit, as was expected. Sales of non-portable computers were down about 16 per cent as consumers opted instead for the rising 'netbook' and similar hybrids. That fact alone is troubling for PC makers, given that $300-$500 netbooks offer a far lower profit margin than more expensive and more powerful laptops and desktops."
business technology duh makeupforitinvolume boohoos
tech business
story
Read More 113 comments
Comments: 113
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Screenshot-sm   Idle: The Oroborus on Thursday January 15, @01:14PM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 15, @01:14PM
from the stop-eating dept.
Image
If I could do this I'd never leave the house.
idle idleispants makeitstop fail damnit
idle idle
story
Read More 41 comments
Comments: 41
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  Apple: So Who's Running Apple Now? on Thursday January 15, @12:54PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 15, @12:54PM
from the i-admit-it-it's-me dept.
Apple
An anonymous reader writes "With Steve Jobs stepping down from heading Apple for at least six months who's running the company that he resurrected? This article names the three people who will try to keep things running. But you have to wonder whether they'll have the charisma needed to keep Apple cool..."
apple starbucks stevejobs mac lisa
apple apple
story
Read More 201 comments
Comments: 201
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  Your Rights Online: Wiretapping Program Ruled Legal on Thursday January 15, @12:12PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 15, @12:12PM
from the can-we-rule-the-ruling-illegal dept.
Privacy
BuhDuh writes "The New York Times is carrying a story concerning that well known bastion of legal authority, the 'Foreign Intelligence Surveillance' court, which has ruled that the National Security Agency's warrantless eavesdropping program was perfectly legal. It says, 'A federal intelligence court, in a rare public opinion, is expected to issue a major ruling validating the power of the president and Congress to wiretap international phone calls and intercept e-mail messages without a court order, even when Americans' private communications may be involved, according to a person with knowledge of the opinion.'"
privacy herecomesthemob yro torches callyourcongressmen
yro privacy
story
Read More 314 comments
Comments: 314
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  Your Rights Online: Germany Legislates For Mandatory Web Filters on Thursday January 15, @11:37AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 15, @11:37AM
from the i-got-a-finger-you-can-filter dept.
The Internet
An anonymous reader writes "Germany's Minister for Families has announced a legislative initiative to force ISPs to implement a government-mandated block list (in English), which will be updated daily. The BKA (Germany's equivalent of the FBI) will be in charge of generating and maintaining the list. As usual, this is being brought in under the 'fight child porn' guise. The minister is quoted as saying: 'We must not water down the problem' in reply to being challenged that this law and technology could be used to censor other content. She then went on to say: 'I can't know what wishes and plans future governments will develop.' She has agreed the principle of the legislation with the interior minister and the technology minister, which in German coalition government terms means it's pretty much a done deal."
internet censorship bigbrother china typoinsummary
yro internet
story
Read More 184 comments
Comments: 184
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Screenshot-sm   Entertainment: Woman Claims Ubuntu Kept Her From Online Classes on Thursday January 15, @10:54AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 15, @10:54AM
from the learning-is-hard dept.
Image
stonedcat writes "A Wisconsin woman has claimed that Dell computers and Ubuntu have kept her from going back to school via online classes. She says she has called Dell to request Windows instead however was talked out of it. Her current claim is that she was unaware that she couldn't install her Verizon online disk to access the Internet, nor could she use Microsoft Word to type up her papers."
troll linux flamebait humor idle
entertainment humor
story
Read More 1087 comments
Comments: 1087
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  Your Rights Online: Collateral Damage as UK Censors Internet Archive on Thursday January 15, @10:08AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 15, @10:08AM
from the well-that's-not-good dept.
Censorship
An anonymous reader noted the latest developments in the controversial censoring of the internet by UK ISPs. Apparently since some content of the Wayback Machine is bad, the whole thing needs to be blacklisted.
censorship idiocracy bigbrother morons uk
yro censorship
story
Read More 192 comments
Comments: 192
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  Technology: The Presidential Portrait Goes Digital on Thursday January 15, @09:21AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 15, @09:21AM
from the oh-oh-obamania dept.
Graphics
alphadogg writes "Barack Obama's election to US president has already brought a string of firsts, and on Wednesday there came another. The official presidential portrait was shot on a digital camera for the first time. The picture was taken by the White House's new official photographer, Pete Souza, and issued by The Office of the President Elect through its Web site. It was taken on Tuesday evening at 5:38 p.m. using a Canon EOS 5D Mark II, according to the metadata embedded in the image file."
graphics government zomgobama idle whocares
tech graphics
story
Read More 244 comments
Comments: 244
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  IT: GPUs Used To Crack WiFi Passwords Faster on Thursday January 15, @08:43AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 15, @08:43AM
from the security-tools-yeah-right dept.
Security
MojoKid writes "Russian-based ElcomSoft has just released ElcomSoft Wireless Security Auditor 1.0, which can take advantage of both Nvidia and ATI GPUs. ElcomSoft claims that the software uses a 'proprietary GPU acceleration technology,' which implies that neither CUDA, Stream, nor OpenCL are being utilized in this instance. At its heart, what ElcomSoft Wireless Security Auditor does is perform brute-force dictionary attacks of WPA and WPA2 passwords. If an access point is set up using a fairly insecure password that is based on dictionary words, there is a higher likelihood that a password can be guessed. ElcomSoft positions the software as a way to 'audit' wireless network security."
security oldnews spam samesame kismet
it security
story
Read More 150 comments
Comments: 150
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  Science: Earth's Radio Telescopes Combining Forces on Thursday January 15, @07:57AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 15, @07:57AM
from the dark-side-of-the-moon dept.
Space
Slatterz writes "I own a basic 70mm telescope, which I'm sure Galileo would have given his right arm for in 1609. In fact, this year marks exactly 400 years since Galileo first pointed a telescope at the skies — discovering the moons of Jupiter and helping to prove that the universe doesn't revolve around us. As a mark of respect, the United Nations has declared 2009 the International Year of Astronomy. Official festivities kick off this week in Paris and, to help start the celebrations, 17 radio telescopes in Australia, Asia, Europe and the Americas will track three quasars using something called "real-time Very Long Baseline Interferometry" — basically creating hi-res images by combining their data to simulate a telescope as large as the Earth. Sounds cool."
space technology starwars voltron skynet
science space
story
Read More 77 comments
Comments: 77
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  Games: Can We Create Fun Games Automatically? on Thursday January 15, @05:50AM

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday January 15, @05:50AM
from the sounds-much-easier,-i-like-it dept.
Programming
togelius writes "What makes games fun? Some (e.g. Raph Koster) claim that fun is learning — fun games are those which are easy to learn, but hard to master, with a long and smooth learning curve. I think we can create fun game rules automatically through measuring their learnability. In a recent experiment, we do this using evolutionary computation, and create some simple Pacman-like new games completely without human intervention! Perhaps this has a future in game design? The academic paper (PDF) is available as well."
programming games ea automaticisntfun wow
games programming
story
Read More 172 comments
Comments: 172
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  Games: Braid, Games As Art, and Interpretation on Thursday January 15, @04:42AM

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday January 15, @04:42AM
from the sometimes-a-rocket-is-just-a-rocket dept.
Games
Zonk points out an opinion piece at Gamers With Jobs about Braid, an independent platformer that received high praise when it was released a few months ago. It's often held up as an example of "games as art," and in this article, Julian Murdoch comments on the act of interpreting such art. He takes Braid's creator, Johnathan Blow, to task for the effect his comments have on the game and its players: "My frustration with Braid is multiplied because it would seem to have been designed with me specifically in mind. I am a student of the obscure. I am pathologically drawn to books, movies, games, and passages of scripture that are dense, difficult, and which hide (and thus reveal) meaning behind layers of art and artifice. Games lend themselves to this layering more than any other medium. The casual player of Oblivion, System Shock 2, Fallout 3 or Bioshock can have an extraordinarily story-light experience if they simply 'play' the games. One layer deeper, a close reading of the environments informs deeper levels of story. Deeper still, evidence in the form of written texts and audio tracks provides footnotes, side-plots and appendices to a central story. ... by the end of my Braid experience, I felt like Blow had specifically constructed something that would generate emails and forum posts begging him to please tell us 'what it all means.'" There is some interesting discussion in the comments, including a response from Blow himself.
games stoygames
games games
story
Read More 30 comments
Comments: 30
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  Hardware: Networked Fridges 'Negotiate' Electricity Use on Thursday January 15, @03:44AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 15, @03:44AM
from the share-the-juice dept.
Power
An anonymous reader writes "Researchers have developed a way to network household and commercial fridges together in a distributed peer-to-peer fashion that lets them 'negotiate' with each other on the best time to consume electricity. A retrofittable controller is attached to each fridge and then a temperature profile is built around the unit. The controller enables communication between other fridges on the network and also the power source. It enables fridges to work together to decide when to cool down, and thus consume power, based on how much surplus power will be available, and to anticipate power shortages and change their running schedules accordingly to use as little power as possible during these times."
ipv6 power technology skynet loadbalancing
hardware power
story
Read More 194 comments
Comments: 194
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  Games: Crayon Physics Combines Science and Puzzles on Thursday January 15, @02:11AM

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday January 15, @02:11AM
from the and-nobody-can-tell-how-bad-you-are-at-drawing dept.
PC Games (Games)
IamAHack writes "NPR covered a new game that seems like it would have great appeal to Slashdot readers: Crayon Physics. Quoting: 'A new computer game went on sale this week. It's not a blockbuster like Halo or World of Warcraft. There's no first-person shooting, no sports, no guitar, no microphone. Instead, there's a crayon. The game is Crayon Physics Deluxe. It's a simple, mesmerizing game created by a 25-year-old independent games designer from Finland named Petri Purho. "It's a game where your crayon drawings come to life,' Purho tells NPR's Melissa Block. 'You draw stuff and your drawings behave physically correctly. As soon as you release the last button, the laws of physics are applied to your drawing."' A demo is available, and Opposable Thumbs has a review of the game."
pcgames science games puzzlegames portablegames
games pcgames
story
Read More 69 comments
Comments: 69
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  Your Rights Online: Biometric Passports Agreed To In EU on Thursday January 15, @12:45AM

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday January 15, @12:45AM
from the look-into-the-scanner dept.
Privacy
An anonymous reader writes "The European Parliament has signed up to a plan to introduce computerized biometric passports including people's fingerprints as well as their photographs, despite criticism from civil liberties groups and security experts who argue that the move is flawed on technical grounds. (Back in 2005 Sweden and Norway began deploying biometric passports.)"
government privacy bigbrother yro gattaca
yro privacy
story
Read More 188 comments
Comments: 188
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  IT: Hope For Fixing Longstanding Linux I/O Wait Bug on Wednesday January 14, @11:55PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 14, @11:55PM
from the patch-it-up dept.
Bug
DaGoodBoy writes "There has been a long standing performance bug in Linux since 2.6.18 that has been responsible for lagging interactivity and poor system performance across all architectures. It has been notoriously difficult to qualify and isolate, but in the last few days someone has finally gotten a repeatable test case! Turns out the problem may not even be disk related, since the test case triggers the bug only by transferring data either between two processes or threads. The test results are very revealing. The developer ran regressions all the way back to version 2.6.15 that demonstrate this bug has more than doubled the time to run the test in 2.6.28. Many, many people working at improving the desktop performance of Linux will be very happy to see this bug die. I know that I, personally, will find a way to send the guy that found this test case his beverage of choice in thanks. Please spread the word and bring some attention to this issue so we can get it fixed!"
bug linux badsummary bugsquashingparty slashdotted
it bug
story
Read More 150 comments
Comments: 150
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  News: Trying To Find White House Missing E-mails on Wednesday January 14, @10:14PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 14, @10:14PM
from the they-were-right-here dept.
Government
Gov IT writes "A federal court ordered on Wednesday all employees working in the Bush White House to surrender media that might contain e-mails sent or received during a two and a half year period in hope of locating missing messages before President-elect Barack Obama takes over next week."
bush whitehouse government news goodluckwiththat
news government
story
Read More 353 comments
Comments: 353
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  Technology: The Unmanned Air Force on Wednesday January 14, @08:10PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 14, @08:10PM
from the fly-the-robotic-skies dept.
The Military
coondoggie writes "How important have unmanned aircraft become to the US military? Well how's this: the Air Force says next year it will acquire more unmanned aircraft than manned. Air Force Lt. Gen. Norman Seip this week said the service is 'all in' when it comes to developing unmanned systems and aircraft. 'Next year, the Air Force will procure more unmanned aircraft than manned aircraft,' the general said. 'I think that makes a very pointed statement about our commitment to the future of [unmanned aircraft] and what it brings to the fight in meeting the requirements of combatant commanders.'"
technology military uav skynet macrossplus
tech military
story
Read More 316 comments
Comments: 316
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  Entertainment: Ricardo Montalban Dead At 88 on Wednesday January 14, @07:05PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 14, @07:05PM
from the welcome-to-fantasy-island dept.
Sci-Fi
DesScorp writes "Ricardo Montalban, immortalized as Khan in the Star Trek franchise, is dead at age 88, passing at his Los Angeles home. Montalban had a long and successful career on television and film. The voice of Rich Corinthian Leather is silenced, but we still have the memories."
khaaaaaaaaan news scifi daplane elavioooooon
entertainment scifi
story
Read More 251 comments
Comments: 251
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Screenshot-sm   News: South Carolina Seeking To Outlaw Profanity on Wednesday January 14, @06:07PM

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday January 14, @06:07PM
from the f@#k-those-f@#king-f@#kers dept.
Image
MBGMorden writes "It looks like in an act that defies common sense, a bill has been introduced in the South Carolina State Senate that seeks to outlaw the use of profanity. According to the bill it would become a felony (punishable by a fine up to $5000 or up to 5 years in prison) to 'publish orally or in writing, exhibit, or otherwise make available material containing words, language, or actions of a profane, vulgar, lewd, lascivious, or indecent nature.' I'm not sure if 'in writing' could be applied to the internet, but in any event this is scary stuff."
censorship democrats government republicans goodluckwiththat
news government
story
Read More 779 comments
Comments: 779
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  Apple: Steve Jobs Takes Leave of Absence From Apple on Wednesday January 14, @05:53PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 14, @05:53PM
from the get-well-soon dept.
Apple
An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from Network World: "A number of sites are reporting that Apple's CEO Steve Jobs is taking a leave of absence till June at least. Speculation over Jobs' possibly failing health has run rampant in the past few weeks. Prior to the recent MacWorld show, Jobs said he had a hormone deficiency that had caused him to dramatically lose weight. In a memo today Jobs told workers his health issues are more complex than he thought." Reader Bastian227 adds a link to this letter from Steve Jobs on Apple's website, which also says that Tim Cook will be responsible for daily operations, though Jobs will remain involved with major strategic decisions.
apple cancer icoffin sellsellsell goodnightsweetprince
apple apple
story
Read More 412 comments
Comments: 412
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  Linux: Ubuntu 9.04 Daily Build Boots In 21.4 Seconds on Wednesday January 14, @05:10PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 14, @05:10PM
from the spurious-precision-is-2.6-times-better dept.
Debian
Pizzutz writes "Softpedia reports that Ubuntu 9.04 Boots in 21.4 Seconds using the current daily build and the newly supported EXT4 file system. From the article: 'There are only two days left until the third Alpha version of the upcoming Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope) will be available (for testing), and... we couldn't resist the temptation to take the current daily build for a test drive, before our usual screenshot tour, and taste the "sweetness" of that evolutionary EXT4 Linux filesystem. Announced on Christmas Eve, the EXT4 filesystem is now declared stable and it is distributed with version 2.6.28 of the Linux kernel and later. However, the good news is that the EXT4 filesystem was implemented in the upcoming Ubuntu 9.04 Alpha 3 a couple of days ago and it will be available in the Ubuntu Installer, if you choose manual partitioning.' I guess it's finally time to reformat my /home partition..."
debian os linux ubuntu ext4
linux debian
story
Read More 601 comments
Comments: 601
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  Technology: Wikipedia Gears Up For Explosion In Digital Media on Wednesday January 14, @04:23PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 14, @04:23PM
from the until-there-is-only-one-site-on-the-internet dept.
The Internet
jbrodkin writes "Wikipedia is gearing up for an explosion in digital content with new servers and storage designed to handle larger photo and video uploads. Until early 2008, the user-generated encyclopedia's primary media file server had just 2TB of total space, which was not enough to hold growing amounts of video, audio and picture files, says CTO Brian Vibber. 'For a long time, we just did not have the capacity [to handle very large media files],' he says. Wikipedia has raised media storage from 2TB to 48TB and the limit on file uploads from 20MB to 100MB. Ultimately, Wikipedia wants to eliminate any practical size limits on uploads, potentially allowing users to post feature length, high-quality videos. 'The limits will get bigger and bigger to where it will be relatively easy for someone who has a legitimate need to upload a two-hour video of good quality,' Vibber says."
internet it explosion versions brilliant
tech internet
story
Read More 137 comments
Comments: 137
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  News: Conflict of Interest May Taint DTV Delay Proposal on Wednesday January 14, @03:28PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 14, @03:28PM
from the hard-to-find-true-disinterest dept.
Television
Anonymous writes "Ars Technica has discovered that one of the Obama transition team members advising on the digital TV transition has a conflict of interest that would benefit WiMAX carrier Clearwire over Verizon. 'Barack Obama's call to delay the DTV transition would affect not only millions of analog TV viewers, but also powerful companies with a vested interest in the changeover date--including at least one with an executive on Obama's transition team.'"
politics usa tv democrats government
news tv
story
Read More 318 comments
Comments: 318
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  Hardware: DC Power Poised To Bring Savings To Datacenters on Wednesday January 14, @02:41PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 14, @02:41PM
from the anthropomorphism-loves-you dept.
Power
snydeq writes "InfoWorld's Logan Harbaugh follows up his '10 IT Power-Saving Myths Debunked' to argue in favor of using DC power in the datacenter. The practice — viewed as a somewhat crackpot means for reducing wasteful conversions in the datacenter just a few short years ago — has gained traction to the point where server vendors such as HP, IBM, and Sun are making DC power supplies available in their server wares. Meanwhile, Panduit and other companies are working to bring down another barrier for DC to the datacenter: a standardized 400-VDC connector and cabling solution. And with GE working to list 600-VDC circuit breakers with the Underwriters Labs, DC's promise of reduced conversion waste could soon be commonly realized."
power it edison acdc hardware
hardware power
story
Read More 278 comments
Comments: 278
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  Science: Mapping the Moon Before Galileo on Wednesday January 14, @01:59PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday January 14, @01:59PM
from the and-this-without-a-time-machine dept.
Moon
ClockEndGooner writes "The BBC has posted an interesting piece on a British contemporary of Galileo who observed the surface of the moon and drew up a more complete set of lunar maps before the much celebrated Florentine. The first lunar cartographer, Thomas Harriot, who also made an early visit to the Jamestown colony in Virginia, observed the moon with an early telescope and mapped his observations five months before Galileo. Noted British astronomer, Sir Patrick Moore, is quoted in the article: 'I'm sorry Harriot isn't better known over here... after all, we all know Galileo. But Harriot was first... and his map of the Moon is better than Galileo's.' Harriot's achievement may not have been as well known, since he deliberately kept a low profile as two of his friends were imprisoned in the Tower of London for political crimes."
moon science space xylaphone firstmap
science moon
story
Read More 52 comments
Comments: 52
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  IT: A Cheap, Distributed Zero-Day Defense? on Wednesday January 14, @01:14PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday January 14, @01:14PM
from the yeah-that-won't-get-gamed dept.
Security
coondoggie writes "Shutting down zero-day computer attacks could be carried out inexpensively by peer-to-peer software that shares information about anomalous behavior, say researchers at the University of California at Davis.The software would interact with existing personal firewalls and intrusion detection systems to gather data about anomalous behavior, says Senthil Cheetancheri, the lead researcher on the project he undertook as a grad student at UC Davis from 2004 to 2007. He now works for SonicWall."
technology security skynet ddos dshield
it security
story
Read More 116 comments
Comments: 116
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  Politics: US Senate & House Create YouTube Channels on Wednesday January 14, @12:20PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday January 14, @12:20PM
from the can't-wait-for-them-to-do-something-that-matters dept.
Government
eldavojohn writes "Following an election in which online videos played an important role, the United States House of Representatives and United States Senate have opened YouTube channels (or 'hubs') advertised to be a 'backstage pass to your government.' Ideally this will bring transparency to citizens and inform them of their senators' & representatives' positions and ideas."
usa politics cspan propaganda government
politics government
story
Read More 193 comments
Comments: 193

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