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  IT: Worm Attack Prompts DoD to Ban Use of External Media 2008-11-21 15:12

Posted by timothy on Friday November 21, @03:12PM
from the sehr-klug dept.
Security
An anonymous reader writes "The Pentagon has suffered from a cyber attack so alarming that it has taken the unprecedented step of banning the use of external hardware devices, such as flash drives and DVDs [...] The attack came in the form of a global virus or worm that is spreading rapidly throughout a number of military networks."
media military security usa
it security
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Screenshot-sm   News: US Officials Flunk Test On Civic Knowledge 2008-11-21 15:06

Posted by samzenpus on Friday November 21, @03:06PM
from the you-are-what-you-elect dept.
Image
A test on civic knowledge given to elected officials proved that they are slightly less knowledgeable than the uninformed people who voted them into office. Elected officials scored a 44 percent while ordinary citizens managed an amazing 49 percent on the 33 questions compiled by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. "It is disturbing enough that the general public failed ISI's civic literacy test, but when you consider the even more dismal scores of elected officials, you have to be concerned," said Josiah Bunting, chairman of the National Civic Literacy Board at ISI. The three branches of government aren't the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria?
news politics
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Comments: 7
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  News: Final Judgment - SCO Loses, Owes $3,506,526 2008-11-21 14:15

Posted by timothy on Friday November 21, @02:15PM
from the seems-charitable-to-sco dept.
The Courts
Xenographic writes "SCO has finally lost to Novell, now that Judge Kimball has entered final judgment against SCO. Of course, this is SCO we're talking about. There's still the litigation in bankruptcy court, which allowed this case to resume so that they could figure out just how much SCO owes, which is $3,506,526, if I calculated the interest properly, $625,486.90 of which will go into a constructive trust. And then there's the possibility that SCO could seek to have the judgment overturned in the appeals courts, or even the Supreme Court when that fails. Of course, they need money to do that and they don't really have much of that any more. Remember how Enderle, O'Gara and company told us that SCO was sure to win? I wonder how many people have emailed them to say, 'I told you so.'"
caldera linux court unix sco
news court
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Comments: 74
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  News: How To Help Our Public Schools With Technology? 2008-11-21 13:32

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @01:32PM
from the freedom-programmers dept.
Education
armorer writes "I'm a programmer engaged to an inner-city public school teacher. I've been thinking for a long time now about what I can do to help close the technology gap, and I finally did something (very small) about it. I convinced my company to give me a few old computers they were replacing, refurbished them, installed Edubuntu on them, and donated them to her classroom. I also took some vacation time to go in, install everything, and give a lesson on computers to the kids. It was a great experience, but now I know first-hand how little technology these schools have. I only helped one classroom. The school needs more. (Really the whole district needs more!) And while I want to help them, I don't really know how. With Thanksgiving a week away and more holidays approaching, I suspect I'm not the only one thinking about this sort of thing. I know it's a hard problem, so I'm not looking for any silver bullets. What do Slashdot readers do? What should I be doing so that I'm more effective? How do you find resources and time to give back?"
education linux !microsoft ltsp bsd
news education
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Comments: 179
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  News: RICO Class Action Against RIAA In Missouri 2008-11-21 12:49

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @12:49PM
from the take-'em-down-dano dept.
The Courts
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "In Atlantic Recording v. Raleigh, an RIAA case pending in St. Louis, Missouri, the defendant has asserted detailed counterclaims against the RIAA for federal RICO violations, fraud, violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, prima facie tort, trespass, and conspiracy. The claims focus on the RIAA's 'driftnet' tactic of suing innocent people, and of demanding extortionate settlements. The RICO 'predicate acts' alleged in the 42-page pleading (PDF) are extortion, mail fraud, and wire fraud. The proposed class includes all people residing in the US 'who were falsely accused ... of downloading copyrighted sound recordings owned by the counterclaim Defendants and making them available for distribution or mass distribution over a P2P network and who incurred costs and damages including legal fees in defense of such false claims' or 'whose computers used in interstate commerce and/or communication were accessed ... without permission or authority.' This is the second class action of which we are aware against the RIAA and the Big 4 recording companies, the first being the Oregon class action brought by Tanya Andersen, which is presently in the discovery phase."
music court ricosuave abouttime bitchslap
news court
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Comments: 90
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  Technology: A Web App For Real-Time Collaborative Writing 2008-11-21 12:05

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @12:05PM
from the write-on dept.
Networking
adamengst writes in with good news for anyone who needs to collaborate remotely on a writing or editing project — coding too. It's especially good news for those using Windows and Linux. Mac users have had SubEthaEdit for a few years now. With EtherPad, two or more people can edit a document and see all the edits simultaneously. EtherPad's main differences from SubEthaEdit: it's a Web application that de facto supports many platforms without the need for a central Mac OS X host; and it's free. Here is a comparison of EtherPad and SubEthaEdit.
internet networking celtx reddit etherpad
tech networking
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Comments: 117
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  News: Lori Drew Cyber-Bullying Trial Begins 2008-11-21 11:17

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @11:17AM
from the trying-to-outlaw-acting-like-a-jerk dept.
The Courts
An anonymous reader writes "The cyber-bullying trial of Lori Drew opened yesterday. She was indicted for conspiring to access and accessing MySpace illegally in order to 'further a tortious act, namely, intentional infliction of emotional distress' (PDF of the indictment). The BBC has background on the case, the NYTimes covers the opening statements, and Wired has today's testimony."
social court loridrew meganmeier myspace
news court
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Comments: 214
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  Science: E=mc^2 Verified In Quantum Chromodynamic Calculation 2008-11-21 10:31

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @10:31AM
from the tee-shirts-were-right-all-along dept.
Supercomputing
chirishnique and other readers sent in a story in AFP about a heroic supercomputer computation that has verified Einstein's most famous equation at the level of subatomic particles for the first time. "A brainpower consortium led by Laurent Lellouch of France's Centre for Theoretical Physics, using some of the world's mightiest supercomputers, have set down the calculations for estimating the mass of protons and neutrons, the particles at the nucleus of atoms. ... [T]he mass of gluons is zero and the mass of quarks is only five per cent. Where, therefore, is the missing 95 per cent? The answer, according to the study published in the US journal Science on Thursday, comes from the energy from the movements and interactions of quarks and gluons. ... [E]nergy and mass are equivalent, as Einstein proposed in his Special Theory of Relativity in 1905." Update: 11/21 15:50 GMT by KD : New Scientist has a slightly more technical look at the accomplishment.
supercomputing science theoryofeverything virtualization gigo
science supercomputing
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Comments: 195
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  Technology: Torvalds's Former Company Transmeta Acquired and Gone 2008-11-21 09:45

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @09:45AM
from the here's-to-you-mister-robinson dept.
Transmeta
desmondhaynes sends along a posting from the TechWatch blog detailing the sale of Transmeta (most recently discussed here). Linus moved ten time-zones west, from Finland to Santa Clara, CA, to join Transmeta in March 1997, before this community existed. Here is our discussion of the announcement of the Crusoe processor from 2000. Our earliest discussion of Transmeta was the 13th Slashdot story. "Transmeta, once a sparkling startup that set out to beat Intel and AMD in mobile computing, announced that it will be acquired by Novafora. The company's most famous employee, Linux inventor Linus Torvalds, kept the buzz and rumor mill about the company throughout its stealth phase alive and guaranteed a flashy technology announcement in early 2000. Almost nine years later Transmeta's journey is over." Update: 11/21 16:25 GMT by KD : It's not the 13th Slashdot story, only the 13th currently in the database. We lost the first 4 months at one point.
transmeta business technology crusoe virtualfab
tech transmeta
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Comments: 102
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  Your Rights Online: Obama's Mobile Phone Records Compromised, Shared 2008-11-21 08:59

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @08:59AM
from the quis-custodiet-ipsos-custodes dept.
Privacy
Tiger4 writes "Verizon has confirmed that some of its employees have accessed and perhaps shared calling records of President Elect Barack Obama (coverage at CNN, Reuters, AP). Verizon says the people involved have all been put on leave with pay as the investigation proceeds. Some of the employees may have accessed the information for legitimate purposes, but others may have been curiosity seekers and may have even shared the information around. The account was 'only' a phone, not a BlackBerry or similar device, and Verizon believes it was just calling records, not voicemail or email that was compromised. The articles do not mention the similarity to the warrantless wiretapping or hospital records compromises of recent months. But that immediately sprang to mind for me."
privacy cellphones verizon communications obama
yro privacy
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Comments: 219
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  Technology: AP Suspends DoD Over Altered US Army Photo 2008-11-21 08:14

Posted by kdawson on Friday November 21, @08:14AM
from the one-big-no-no dept.
The Military
djupedal notes a story up at the BBC about the Associated Press's suspension of the use of Department of Defense photos after a photo of General Ann Dunwoody was found to have been altered (before and after comparison). "The Pentagon has become embroiled in a row after the US Army released a photo of a general to the media which was found to have been digitally altered. Ann Dunwoody was shown in front of the US flag but it later emerged that this background had been added. The Associated Press news agency subsequently suspended the use of US Department of Defense photos. 'For us, there's a zero-tolerance policy of adding or subtracting actual content from an image,' said Santiago Lyon, AP's director of photography."
media military associatedpress propaganda hypocrisy
tech military
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Comments: 495
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  Technology: Silverlight On the Way To Linux 2008-11-21 06:39

Posted by timothy on Friday November 21, @06:39AM
from the howl-at-the-moonlight dept.
Graphics
Afforess writes "For the past two years Microsoft and Novell have been working on the 'Moonlight' project. It is a runtime library for websites that run Silverlight. It should allow PCs running Linux to view sites that use Siverlight. Betanews reports 'In the next stage of what has turned out to be a more successful project than even its creators envisioned, the public beta of Moonlight — a runtime library for Linux supporting sites that expect Silverlight — is expected within days.' Moonlight 2.0 is already in the works."
microsoft linux graphics nothanks silverlight
tech graphics
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Comments: 366
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  Games: Hacks Allowing Disabled Gamers To Play Guitar Hero 2008-11-21 04:01

Posted by Soulskill on Friday November 21, @04:01AM
from the getting-out-of-hand dept.
Hardware Hacking
angrymilkman writes "Here are two interesting new approaches where researchers modified the popular Guitar Hero game so it can be played by gamers with disabilities. Air Guitar Hero modifies the Guitar Hero controller so someone without limbs can play it by using electrodes attached to the user's residual arm. Blind Hero is a mod for Frets on Fire that uses a haptic glove that can turn visual feedback into haptic feedback, allowing blind gamers to play Guitar Hero songs." There have been a variety of Guitar Hero hacks in the past, including a custom drum pad for playing the guitar part, using the plastic guitar as a real instrument, and rocking out with your bike, but it's nice to see some more serious modifications showing up.
games hardhack badtitle timmah nessarose
games hardhack
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Comments: 83
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  Technology: Oblong's g-speak Brings "Minority Report" Interface To Life 2008-11-21 00:50

Posted by timothy on Friday November 21, @12:50AM
from the staged-mock-up-or-real-time-control? dept.
GUI
tracheopterix writes "Oblong Industries, a startup based in LA has unveiled g-speak, an operational version of the notable interface from Minority Report. One of Oblong's founders served as science and technology adviser for the film; the interface was an extension of his doctoral work at the MIT Media Lab. Oblong calls g-speak a 'spatial operating environment' and adds that 'the SOE's combination of gestural i/o, recombinant networking, and real-world pixels brings the first major step in computer interface since 1984.'" The video shown on Oblong's front page is an impressive demo.
displays gui inputdev gorillaarm minorityreport
tech gui
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Comments: 189
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  Science: Massive Martian Glaciers Found 2008-11-20 21:56

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @09:56PM
from the could-be-a-trick dept.
Space
Kozar_The_Malignant writes "Scientific American is reporting that 'data from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter point to vast glaciers buried beneath thin layers of crustal debris.' Data from the surface-penetrating radar on MRO revealed that two well-known mid-latitude features are composed of solid water ice. One is about three times the size of the City of Los Angeles. This certainly makes the idea of establishing a station on Mars far more plausible."
space mars totalrecall startthereactor get
science space
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Comments: 278
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  Ask Slashdot: How To Find a Mobile Games Publisher? 2008-11-20 19:45

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @07:45PM
from the take-me-away-from-all-this dept.
Cellphones
n01 writes "In the last few months of my spare time, I've been implementing an abstract strategy board game (that I invented) along with a decent AI. The game resembles TwixT in that it is also a connection game, and could be played without the need for a cellphone or computer. The implementation on the Java 2 Mobile Edition platform will soon be finished, with only some minor usability and sound issues to fix. While I enjoyed working on the game (actually more than on my day job as a programmer) I would still like to earn some money from selling the game, so I can work more on such projects in the future. What experiences have Slashdot readers had with selling their applications/games for mobile phones? With which publisher will I have the broadest audience and achieve the highest earnings? Would you try to publish the game both as a mobile game and a traditional board game?"
games cellphones askslashdot donationware storystory
askslashdot cellphones
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Comments: 100
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  Science: Resurrecting the Mighty Mammoth, Cheaply 2008-11-20 18:34

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @06:34PM
from the when-faster-and-cheaper-are-synonymous dept.
Biotech
somanyrobots writes with an interesting followup in the New York Times to the earlier-reported substantial reconstruction of the woolly mammoth genome: "Scientists are talking for the first time about the old idea of resurrecting extinct species as if this staple of science fiction is a realistic possibility, saying that a living mammoth could perhaps be regenerated for as little as $10 million. The same technology could be applied to any other extinct species from which one can obtain hair, horn, hooves, fur or feathers, and which went extinct within the last 60,000 years, the effective age limit for DNA." (The Washington Post article linked from the earlier post was much more skeptical, calling such an attempt "still firmly the domain of science fiction." The New York Times article, while describing the process in similar terms, also calls attention to recent advances in sequencing DNA, as well as recoding DNA for cloning.)
science biotech jurassicpark whatcouldpossiblygowrong dodo
science biotech
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Comments: 295
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  Technology: Unix Dict/grep Solves Left-Side-of-Keyboard Puzzle 2008-11-20 17:40

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @05:40PM
from the mysteries-of-the-ages dept.
Unix
destinyland writes "For decades, people have been asking this brain teaser: 'What's the longest word you can type with only the left-hand letters on a keyboard?' The answer is supposed to be 'stewardesses,' but grepping the standard dictionary that ships with Unix reveals a much better answer. There's nearly 2,000 shorter words that can typed with only the left hand — including one word that's even longer. (The article also quotes a failed novel attempt using nothing but words typed on the keyboard's left side.)"
idle humor unix tech nowfortheright
tech unix
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Comments: 385
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  News: Zapping Contrails With Microwave Emitters 2008-11-20 17:12

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @05:12PM
from the set-it-for-beverage dept.
Earth
An anonymous reader writes "Dissipation of contrails with a powerful microwave beam aligned behind aircraft engines is being touted as a possible solution to help address air transport's effects on the climate. 'The remote heating of condensation nuclei could be achieved by applying electromagnetic radiation, such as microwaves,' says Cranfield University's Frank Noppel. 'Depending on assumptions made, calculation shows that the power required for such a device could be as little as 0.1% of the engine power.'"
technology transportation earth chemtrails news
news earth
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Comments: 121
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  Technology: Kaminsky Bug Options Include "Do Nothing," Says IETF 2008-11-20 16:46

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @04:46PM
from the doing-stuff-is-overrated dept.
Security
netbuzz writes "Meeting in Minneapolis this week, the Internet engineering community is debating whether to aggressively fashion and apply fixes for the so-called Kaminsky bug in the DNS discovered this summer, or to simply let its threat stand as motivation for all to move with greater speed toward DNSSEC, which is considered the best long-term security solution. Problem with the latter approach is that DNSSEC has been in the works for a decade already, no one is confident it will be universally embraced, and the Kaminsky flaw is causing real problems today.
internet it security bug dns
tech security
Read More 130 comments
Comments: 130

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