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  Science: Danish Expert Declares Vinland Map Genuine on Sunday July 19, @04:38AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday July 19, @04:38AM
from the even-now-they-walk-among-us dept.
media
MBCook writes "A Danish conservation expert named Rene Larson has finished a 5-year study of the infamous Vinland Map and declared it genuine. 'All the tests that we have done over the past five years — on the materials and other aspects — do not show any signs of forgery,' he said at the press conference. He and his team studied the ink, the paper, and even insect damage. They believe that the ink, which was discovered in 1972 to contain titanium dioxide and thus supposedly to be too new for the map to be genuine, was contaminated when sand was used to dry the ink."
Read More... 2 comments
media science science media story
Comments: 2
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  Games: Can New Game Control Schemes Hope To Match the PC Keyboard? on Sunday July 19, @02:50AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday July 19, @02:50AM
from the precision-and-complexity dept.
inputdev
An opinion piece on Gamasutra discusses how, in spite of the fancy new motion control systems that have come to console gaming, the PC's keyboard and mouse setup is still unreplaceable for many titles and genres. Quoting: "With over 100 keys to choose from (back of the box quotation right there), the possibilities are near endless, if you start to think of shift and control functions altering the purpose of keys. It means that, when the developers start to make their game, they don't have to worry about the limitations of the interface, knowing that, if all else fails, they can always assign the compass to K, even if that's a bit of a stretch to all but the pianists. The keyboard is the friend of ambition, and ArmA 2 is the testament to that, in all its surrealist, broken glory. ... It's the same reason RTS games have found a home on the PC for so long, able to use the skills people accumulate moving around windows and clicking on icons to command troops and manipulate their battle lines. Developers taking advantage of what we already know to teach us something we don't is what gaming is all about."
Read More... 22 comments
games inputdev games inputdev story
Comments: 22
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  Science: Study Catches Birds Splitting Into Separate Species on Saturday July 18, @11:58PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @11:58PM
from the it's-not-me-it's-you dept.
education
webdoodle writes "A new study finds that a change in a single gene has sent two closely related bird populations on their way to becoming two distinct species. The study, published in the August issue of the American Naturalist, is one of only a few to investigate the specific genetic changes that drive two populations toward speciation."
Read More... 43 comments
science education speciation evolution genetics science education story
Comments: 43
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  Hardware: Consumers May Find Smart Appliances a Dumb Idea on Saturday July 18, @10:57PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @10:57PM
from the will-you-please-just-cook-my-carrots-now dept.
power
theodp writes "As GE readies appliances that communicate with smart meters in the hope of taking advantage of cheaper electricity rates, CNet asks a big question: Are consumers ready for the smart grid? Right now, most utilities only offer a flat rate, not time-of-use pricing, so the example of a drier that reacts to a 'price signal' about peak rates by keeping one's clothes wet until a more affordable time is pretty much a fantasy. And longer-term, a big question is whether consumers will want to deal with the hassle of optimizing household appliance energy usage themselves, or be willing to relinquish monitoring and control to utility companies — with a concomitant loss of privacy. After all, losing one's copy of 1984 is one thing — losing one's lights and refrigerator is another thing altogether."
Read More... 142 comments
power earth bigbrother !donotwant hardware power story
Comments: 142
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  Science: Early Abort of Ares I Rocket Would Kill Crew on Saturday July 18, @08:37PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @08:37PM
from the do-not-push-the-big-red-button dept.
nasa
FleaPlus writes "From studying past solid rocket launch failures, the 45th Space Wing of the US Air Force has concluded that an early abort (up to a minute after launch) of NASA Marshall Flight Center's Ares I rocket would have a ~100% chance of killing all crew (report summary and link), even if the launch escape system were activated. This would be due to the capsule being surrounded until ground impact by a 3-mile-wide cloud of burning solid propellant fragments, which would melt the parachute. NASA management has stated that their computer models predict a safe outcome. The Air Force has also been hesitant to give launch range approval to the predecessor Ares I-X suborbital rocket, since its solid rocket vibrations are violent enough to disable both its steering and self-destruct module, endangering people on the ground."
Read More... 242 comments
military nasa space slantinel abort science nasa story
Comments: 242
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  IT: Security Threats 3 Levels Beyond Kernel Rootkits on Saturday July 18, @06:19PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @06:19PM
from the close-to-the-machine dept.
security
GhostX9 writes "Tom's Hardware has a long interview with security expert Joanna Rutkowska (which is unfortunately split over 9 pages). Many think that kernel rootkits are the most dangerous attacks, but Joanna and her team have been studying exploits beyond Ring 0 for some years. Joanna is most well known for the BluePill virtualization attack (Ring -1) and in this interview she chats a little bit about Ring -2 and Ring -3 attacks that go beyond kernel rootkits. What's surprising is how robust the classic BluePill proof-of-concept is: 'Many people tried to prove that BluePill is "detectable" by writing various virtualization detectors (but not BluePill detectors). They simply assumed that if we detect a virtualization being used, this means that we are "under" BluePill. This assumption was made because there were no products using hardware virtualization a few years ago. Needless to say, if we followed this way of reasoning, we might similarly say that if an executable makes network connections, then it must surely be a botnet.'" Rutkowska says that for her own security, "I don't use any A/V product on any of my machines (including all the virtual machines). I don't see how an A/V program could offer any increased security over the quite-reasonable-setup I already deployed with the help of virtualization." She runs three separate virtual machines, designated Red, Yellow, and Green, each running a separate browser and used for increasingly sensitive tasks.
Read More... 148 comments
security matrix hardcore thatshot bluepill it security story
Comments: 148
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  News: Brazil Demands Repatriation of UK Hazardous Waste on Saturday July 18, @05:07PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @05:07PM
from the got-enough-of-our-own-thanks dept.
earth
Peace Corps Online writes "BBC reports that Brazilian authorities are demanding the return of more than 1,400 tons of hazardous British waste found in about 90 shipping containers on three Brazilian docks. The waste, which includes syringes, condoms, and bags of blood, has been identified as being of UK origin from the names of British supermarkets and newspapers among the rubbish. Reports in the UK media say the waste was sent from Felixstowe in eastern England to the port of Santos, near Sao Paulo, and two other ports in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul. The British government has launched an investigation into how and why the waste was sent to Brazil and the British Embassy in Brazil has said in a statement that it was investigating and would 'not hesitate to act' if it was found that a UK company had violated the Basel Convention on the movement of hazardous waste. Meanwhile Brazil is demanding the immediate return of the rubbish to the UK. 'We will ask for the repatriation of this garbage,' says Roberto Messias, head of the Brazilian environment agency. 'Clearly, Brazil is not a big rubbish dump of the world.'" Two UK companies named by Brazil as suspected exporters of the waste are owned by a Brazilian, based in the UK, who says that anything that was in the containers other than the expected recyclable plastic is a problem to take up with his suppliers.
Read More... 84 comments
business earth yuck passthebuck biohazard news earth story
Comments: 84
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  Science: Of Science and Choice In Online Dating on Saturday July 18, @03:55PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @03:55PM
from the not-the-only-starfish-in-the-sea dept.
social
Must be summertime, as online publications turn to the contemplation of Internet dating. The NY Times's piece (registration may be required) takes a not particularly deep look at the reality behind the "science" claims of chemistry.com, eHarmony.com, and others. "The question is how much it really matters to users if the methods have any scientific basis. A friend of mine... said she looked at several dating sites and chose the ones that looked like they had 'the least riffraff.'" Technology Review focuses on studies showing that the overwhelming number of choices presented by many dating sites can be counterproductive: "...more search options lead to less selective processing by reducing users' cognitive resources, distracting them with irrelevant information, and reducing their ability to screen out inferior options." The article concludes with a look at the startup Omnidate, which offers technology for 3D virtual dating. The site has had twice as many women (by percentage) sign up as the other dating sites typically see.
Read More... 197 comments
internet science social redandblue science social story
Comments: 197
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  News: We Were Smarter About Copyright Law 100 Years Ago on Saturday July 18, @02:43PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday July 18, @02:43PM
from the intelligent-debate dept.
government
An anonymous reader writes "James Boyle has a blog post comparing the recording industry's arguments in 1909 to those of 2009, with some lovely Google book links to the originals. Favorite quote: 'Many and numerous classes of public benefactors continue ceaselessly to pour forth their flood of useful ideas, adding to the common stock of knowledge. No one regards it as immoral or unethical to use these ideas and their authors do not suffer themselves to be paraded by sordid interests before legislative committees uttering bombastic speeches about their rights and representing themselves as the objects of "theft" and "piracy."' Industry flaks were more impressive 100 years ago. In that debate the recording industry was the upstart, battling the entrenched power of the publishers of musical scores. Also check out the cameo appearance by John Philip Sousa, comparing sound recordings to slavery. Ironically, among the subjects mentioned as clearly not the subject of property rights were business methods and seed varieties." Boyle concludes: "...one looks back at these transcripts and compares them to today's hearings — with vacuous rantings from celebrities and the bloviation of bad economics and worse legal theory from one industry representative after another — it is hard not to feel a sense of nostalgia. In 1900, it appears, we were better at understanding that copyright was a law that regulated technology, a law with constitutional restraints, that property rights were not absolute and that the public would not automatically be served by extending rights out to infinity."
Read More... 104 comments
government copyright news reaganomics beforedisney news government story
Comments: 104
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  Games: Publishers Pressuring MS To Push Indies From Xbox Live? on Saturday July 18, @01:33PM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday July 18, @01:33PM
from the muscling-in dept.
microsoft
R. Dobbs writes "Microsoft has reportedly drastically reduced the amount of indie titles it's going to allow on its Live Arcade service — but no such limits have been placed on material from major publishers. Have the publishers themselves been pushing this agenda? And what will it mean for indies? Quoting: 'More and more indie developers are being created, bucking the trend of working for the blockbuster-sized titles of many publishers and opting to control their own development and keep their IPs. This is likely becoming more and more of a concern to major publishers, who seem — especially in ZeniMax's recent purchase of id Software and EA's combination of Bioware and Mythic, as well as Warner Bros. purchase of Midway's IPs and studios — to be doing everything they can to consolidate their power and lock down all the available resources.' When questioned, Microsoft released a statement saying that they're 'a great supporter of independent game development.'"
Read More... 81 comments
games xbox microsoft indie live games microsoft story
Comments: 81
 
Poll Checked out from the library right now, I've got ...
1-5 books, but only books
6-10 books, but only books
> 10 books, but only books
1-5 items, including videos or other non-book items
6-10 items, including videos or other non-book items
> 10 items, including videos or other non-book items
Not a thing
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:287 | Votes:17164

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