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Power

Submission + - Half of India Without Electricity as Power Grid Crisis Deepens

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "BBC reports that a massive power breakdown has hit India for a second day running, leaving more than half the country without power as the northern and eastern grids have both collapsed. The breakdown has hit a large swathe of the country including Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Rajasthan states in the north, and West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa and Jharkhand in the east. Power cuts are a common occurrence in Indian cities because of a fundamental shortage of power and an aging grid and the chaos caused by such cuts has led to protests and unrest on the streets but the collapse of an entire grid is rare — the last time the northern grid failed was in 2001. India's demand for electricity has soared in recent years as its economy has grown but its power infrastructure has been unable to meet the growing needs. In the weeks leading up to the failure, extreme heat had caused power use to reach record levels in New Delhi and on July 30 a line feeding into the Agra-Bareilly transmission section, the 400-kV Bina-Gwalior line, tripped, triggering the collapse. The second grid collapse occurred on 31 July as the Northern, Eastern and North-Eastern power grids of India tripped/failed causing power blackout in 19 states across India. The crisis was allegedly triggered after four states — Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab and UP — drew much more than their assigned share of power."
Piracy

Submission + - Flava Works Cites Piracy; Sues FileSonic, Oron (paritynews.com)

hypnosec writes: Flava Works has dragged Oron and FileSonic – two file sharing and file hosting services, by filing a complaint at a federal court in Illinois, US. According to the adult entertainment company these files have been also shared by other file sharing services like RapidShare. Flava Works filed the complaint last week and according to the filing, FileSonic and Oron have been named as offenders of several copyrights. The complaint has given these websites as tags of 'illegitimate' outfits and notes that these websites are “websites that copy, store, distribute, display, profit from unauthorized copyrighted materials, and/or induce and assist others to infringe copyrighted materials.”
Input Devices

Submission + - Microsoft Releases Batch of New Input Devices

jones_supa writes: To accompany Windows 8, Microsoft has released some interesting keyboard and mouse devices, all being wireless and using Bluetooth. The Wedge Touch Mouse is an artful product which is an angular wedge, being compact enough for travel too. Wedge Mobile Keyboard follows the style of laptop keyboards and includes a snap-on cover. Sculpt Touch Mouse is more like a classic mouse but features a four-way touch scroll strip. Finally we have Sculpt Mobile Keyboard which is a lighter version of a classic curved keyboard. All four are on the expensive side, but at first impression seem high-quality.
Censorship

Submission + - Tom Daley Twitter abuse: Police arrest boy in Weymouth (bbc.co.uk)

Chrisq writes: "The BBC reportsthat a teenager has been arrested by police investigating abuse of Team GB diver Tom Daley on Twitter. It goes on to say "A 17-year-old boy was arrested at a guest house in the Weymouth area on suspicion of malicious communications".

Evidently he twitted "You let your dad down i hope you know that".

If there ever was something that should have been left to censure by other fans and friends and not made a police matter then this is it. This sets an all-time low in the threshold of free speech in the UK. If it sets a precedent how many other comments and posts will result in charges? How much normal conversation would be illegal?

This is also likely to be ceased on by groups wanting to suppress criticism; with "unkind words" being reported to police."

Printer

Submission + - Additive Manufacturing (3D Printing), Gun Control, Patent Law (reason.com)

retroworks writes: "J.D. Tuccille of the conservative think tank Reason Foundation covers Sebastion Anthony's Extreme Tech write-up of the first working 3D Printed Gun. According to Anthony, the partly plastic ".22-caliber pistol, formed from a 3D-printed AR-15 (M16) lower receiver, and a normal, commercial upper" fired 200 rounds without any sign of wear and tear. Tuccille takes the discovery in the direction of politically topical gun control. But in my mind, the example of AM technology raises even more questions about patent law enforcement. Will 3D printing be to the Anti-gray-market-alliance what online porn became to neighborhood blue laws?"
Cellphones

Submission + - Number of 'Distracted Walking' Injuries Quadruples

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "The LA Times reports that the number of people who have landed in US emergency rooms thanks to injuries incurred while they were walking and texting, tweeting, playing video games, talking on the phone, or listening to music on headphones, has more than quadrupled in the past seven years with 1,152 people treated in 2011 for distracted walking, a number that is likely a gross underestimate since many doctors or nurses may not have asked whether the patient was using a mobile device at the time of the accident. "We are where we were with cellphone use in cars 10 years or so ago. We knew it was a problem, but we didn't have the data," says Jonathan Atkins, executive director of the Governors Highway Safety Association. Philadelphia officials are drafting a safety campaign that will be aimed in part at pedestrians who are looking at their devices instead of where they're going. "One of the messages will certainly be 'pick your head up' — I want to say 'nitwit,' but I probably shouldn't call them names," says Rina Cutler, deputy mayor for transportation and public utilities. Psychological studies that show most people can't focus on two things at once. Rather, their attention shifts rapidly back and forth between tasks, and performance suffers. But like a lot of drivers who use cellphones behind the wheel, pedestrians often think they're in control and that it's all the other fools on their phones who aren't watching what they're doing. "People really need to be aware that they are impacting their safety by texting or talking on the cellphone" while walking, says Eric Lamberg, author of a study of young people walking and using their cell phones. "I think the risk is there.""

Submission + - The Other Bad Leroy Brown: Author of Encyclopedia Brown Passes Away (npr.org)

DrCircuit writes: The author of the Encyclopedia Brown series recently passed away. Donald Sobol wrote the series about the adventures of the boy detective Leroy (Encyclopedia) Brown, which was first published in 1963. I always enjoyed these when I was growing up and hadn't though about them for many years. Thank you Mr. Sobel.
Linux

Submission + - What was the top desktop at Black Hat? Linux. That's Right. Linux (internetnews.com)

darthcamaro writes: The Linux desktop is alive and well, no matter what others might say. At the recent Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas, Linux was the top desktop OS used by attendees, eclipsing both Windows and MacOS.
So next time anyone says to you that no one uses the Linux desktop — just tell em the smartest security professionals in the world do.

Japan

Submission + - Starting the Machine Revolution now in Japan! (theverge.com)

Hanike writes: "According to The Verge, Japanese hi-tech company Suidobashi Heavy Industry is developing a 13-foot, diesel-powered real Mecha robot called Kurata!

"Japanese engineers are working on everything from robots that walk like humans, to robots to help you in the lab, to robot babies for studying human development, but where are the mechs? Thankfully, Wired Japan shows us that Suidobashi Heavy Industry is on the case, having completed a 13-foot-tall, 4.4-ton, diesel-powered robot called Kuratas. The two-man team — artist Kogoro Kurata and robotics researcher Wataru Yoshizaki — isn't stopping there, either. Suidobashi wants to mass produce, starting at the low price of $1.35 million.

So what do you get for the money? Kuratas has over 30 hydraulic joints that allow it to freely move its arms, legs, and torso. It can fire water bottle rockets and fireworks, and its 6,000 round-per-minute BB gattling guns are controlled with the pilot’s smile; part of Yoshizaki’s V-Shido (read like bushido, as in "way of the samurai") control system. In order to get around, the four-legged mech uses ordinary wheels, but the Suidobashi team wants to get it walking in order to navigate uneven terrain. If you’d like to see more, you can check out the rest of Wired’s photographs of the team’s garage, and check below for video of the prototype's unveiling this past weekend in Chiba, as well as promotional videos — complete with CG of the robot driving through Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo.""

The Internet

Submission + - Tech & Internet History With A Bit Of Comedic Relief... (mrtechhistory.com)

Mr Tech History writes: Hey Slashdot readers — OK — something a little different. This is brand-spanking new — taking something that could be geekie (like me) and putting some flavoring into it for the consumer. It's — I guess, pop tech and internet history — all those "oh wows" without the geek speak/atmosphere. I culled the information from a sister site I developed — that's about 45,000 pages. I figured now — with Facebook and all, all I have to do is create relevent links to pages. Anyway — let me know what you think of "Random and Fascinating Facts From Tech & Internet History." The audio minute that is... Thanks — Gary West...
The Internet

Submission + - ICANN backflips again (techworld.com.au)

angry tapir writes: "The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) has backflipped again on the process for evaluating applications for new generic top-level domains such as .bank and .lol. The proposal to evaluate applications in batches of 500 had been subject to criticism from registrars, particularly the 'digital archery' component, which would be used to determine which batch an application would be part of. Last month, ICANN scrapped digital archery altogether, and now ICANN has announced that it will seek simultaneous processing of all applications. The reason people were annoyed at the batching process was it meant that even if an application for a new domain was complete and correct, and even if a domain application was not contested by anyone else, it could end up going live years after other new TLDs did. Given it will cost over a couple of hundred grand to run a new TLD, people were upset. The whole gTLD process has been fraught with delays and security breaches."
Moon

Submission + - Apollo mission flags still upright (bbc.co.uk)

Kittenman writes: The BBC reports that the Apollo mission flags are still standing — with one exception. At Apollo 11 blast-off from the luna surface, the flag was knocked over (Buzz Aldrin reported this at the time). It's not known what sort of colours are visible in the flags owing to UV light exposure.

All in all, hopefully a blow to Moon Mission deniers?

Cloud

Submission + - Oracle to buy Xsigo Systems (yahoo.com)

Ali Liaqat writes: "REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) — Business software maker Oracle Corp. said Monday that it has agreed to buy networking technology company Xsigo Systems for an undisclosed sum.

Xsigo's technology is used by companies such as eBay, Verizon and British Telecom to help manage their data centers. It uses virtualization, which lets single computers and servers function as multiple machines, to let its customers connect any server to any network and data storage. Oracle said this helps save money and boosts the performance of applications.

Oracle said that by combining Xsigo's network virtualization technology and Oracle's VM server virtualization technology it expects to offer a "complete set" of virtualization capabilities to its customers.

Oracle's stock slipped 22 cents to $30.55 in midday trading Monday."

Submission + - Best Business-to-Business Facts About Social Media Use (nethawk.net)

An anonymous reader writes: In Stowe Boyd’s interesting post on social media boundaries titled, “In Texas, You’re On Your Own” he lists a few truisms that resonate with a once-upon-a-time Texan who misses many parts of the state’s unique brand of togetherness: First, for employers: You shouldn’t fire employees who are expressing lawful opinions that you do not agree with, even if you can. And based on where you are sited, or where your employees work, maybe you can’t. It’s a rotten world if every Republican CEO can fire Democrat employees, and vice versa.
Australia

Submission + - Australian Billionaire Wants To Build Jurassic Park-Style Resort (gizmodo.com.au)

lukehopewell1 writes: Australian billionaire Clive Palmer has already floated a plan to rebuild the Titanic to scale and sail it around the world, but now the mining magnate has found a new use for his money: cloning dinosaurs.

Palmer reportedly wants to clone a dinosaur and let it loose in one of his resorts in Queensland, Australia. The billionaire has already been in touch with the scientists who helped clone Dolly the sheep to see what it would take to clone a dinosaur from DNA.

AT&T

Submission + - Facebook triples lobbying budget from last year (washingtonpost.com)

McGruber writes: Washington Post reporter (and Cmdr Taco's coworker) Cecilia Kang is reporting (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-tech/post/facebook-triples-lobbying-budget-eyes-white-house/2012/07/23/gJQAodvo4W_blog.html) that "Facebook tripled its lobbying efforts in the second quarter of the year, spending nearly $1 million to influence Congress, the Federal Trade Commission and White House on their positions regarding online privacy and child safety protection."

However, FB has spent far less than Google, "which spent nearly $4 million in lobbying during the same period".... and both Facebook and Google have lobbying budgets that are a fraction of the size of telecom heavyweights AT&T and Verizon.

Robotics

Submission + - XRL Hexapod Robot Gets a Tail, Learns to Use It (ieee.org)

toygeek writes: In an effort to give various robots more control during free-fall and navigation of severe obstacles, researchers have studied how agama lizards use their tails to retain or correct orientation during leaps and jumps. They've applied the research to both hexapod and wheeled robots, and the results are both astounding, and outstanding!

Submission + - NOAA has overestimated land surface temperature trends by up to two times. (wordpress.com)

BMOC writes: "Anthony Watts of Surfacestations project (crowdsourced research) has finally yielded some discussion worthy results (pdf). He uses a siting classification system developed by Michel Leroy for Meteofrance in 1999 that was improved in 2010 to quantify the effect of heat sinks and sources within the thermometer viewshed by calculation of the area- weighted and distance-weighted impact of biasing elements to calculate both raw and gridded 30 year trends for each surveyed station, using temperature data from USHCNv2. His initial claims are that station siting is impacting the surface temperature record significantly, and NOAA adjustments are exacerbating that problem, not helping. Whether you agree with his results or not, recognize that this method of research is modern and worth your participation in the review. Poke holes in publicly sourced and presented research all you can, that's what makes this method useful."
Graphics

Submission + - Hardware-accelerated video transcoding under the microscope (techreport.com)

crookedvulture writes: "For years, AMD, Intel, and Nvidia have hyped the hardware-accelerated video transcoding capabilities of their CPUs and GPUs. Some implementations use dedicated logic, while others leverage the arrays of shader processors in modern graphics chips. Turns out all this hardware-accelerated mojo may be no better than old-school software transcoding. This look at video transcoding on the PC provides a detailed comparison of the latest solutions, and software transcoding consistently produces the highest-quality results. If you can live with artifacts, the QuickSync logic built into Intel's recent CPUs is easily the fastest of the hardware-accelerated solutions, though the output quality varies widely with the software used. A beta version of the hardware-accelerated x264 encoder produces consistently good results on multiple hardware configurations, but it's not much faster than pure software transcoding on a modern CPU."

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