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Advent Calendar For Geeks 65

bLanark writes "Well, as children and adults all over the world begin their day with chocolate, with the traditional Advent calendar, I'd like to remind you that there's an alternative for geeks. The Perl Advent calendar will give you a new Perl tip every day right up to Christmas."
Transportation

Heroic Engineer Crashes Own Vehicle To Save a Life 486

scottbomb sends in this feel-good story of an engineer-hero, calling it "one of the coolest stories I've read in a long time." "A manager of Boeing's F22 fighter-jet program, Innes dodged the truck, then looked back to see that the driver was slumped over the wheel. He knew a busy intersection was just ahead, and he had to act fast. Without consulting the passengers in his minivan — 'there was no time to take a vote' — Innes kicked into engineer mode. 'Basic physics: If I could get in front of him and let him hit me, the delta difference in speed would just be a few miles an hour, and we could slow down together,' Innes explained."
Iphone

Submission + - Android OS adoption rate surges past competition (informationweek.com)

__aaelyr464 writes: During the six months ending in August, the number of people who bought Android smartphones increased steadily, culminating in 32% buying the devices in August, according to Nielsen. Research in Motion's BlackBerry and Apple's iPhone in the last month of the period were at a statistical tie at 26% and 25%, respectively. Of course, overall market penetration shows a different story: looking at the overall share for each OS in the total market, BlackBerry OS still leads with 31%, with iOS in a close second at 28%. However, BlackBerry's market share has decreased from 36% in January, with iOS remaining steady. In that same time period, Android's market share has more than doubled, climbing from 8% to 19%.

Now for the zany predictions: researcher Gartner predicts Symbian and Android to dominate the smartphone market by 2014, taking around 30% of the market share each, with Apple's iOS taking half that. Rival research group IDC paints a similar picture, with Symbian taking the lead at 33%, and Android at 25%.

So I ask you fellow slashdotters: Do you believe these predictions? How will Apple respond to the threat of Android? Will Microsoft actually get back into the smartphone game with Windows 7?

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Verizon Charged Marine's Widow an Early Termination Fee 489

In a decision that was reversed as soon as someone with half a brain in their PR department learned about it, Verizon charged a widow a $350 early termination fee. After the death of her marine husband, Michaela Brummund decided to move back to her home town to be with her family. Verizon doesn't offer any coverage in the small town so Michaela tried to cancel her contract, only to be hit with an early termination fee. From the article: "'I called them to cancel. I told them the situation with my husband. I even said I would provide a death certificate,' Michaela said."
Privacy

Federal Judge Limits DHS Laptop Border Searches 359

Declan McCullogh is reporting at CNET that a federal district court judge has rebuked the Department of Homeland Security, "which had claimed it can seize a traveler's laptop and search it six months later without warrant." As described in the article, DHS policies have been stacked against travelers entering the US, including citizens returning from abroad: "There's no requirement that they be returned to their owners after even six months or a year has passed, though supervisory approval is required if they're held for more than 15 days. The complete contents of a hard drive or memory card can be perused at length for evidence of lawbreaking of any kind, even if it's underpaying taxes or not paying parking tickets." This ruling does not address immediate searches at the border, but says that DHS cannot hold computers for indefinite searching, as in the case to hand, concerning a US citizen returning from a trip to Korea, whose laptop was seized and held for months before a search was even conducted on it.
Displays

For Normals, Jobs' "Retina Display" Claim May Be Fair After All 386

The Bad Astronomer writes "AT WWDC, Steve Jobs claimed that the iPhone 4's display has about the same resolution as the human eye — held at one foot away, the iPhone 4's pixels are too small to see. After reading an earlier Slashdot post about an expert disputing Jobs' claim, I decided to run the numbers myself. I found that Jobs is correct for people with normal vision, and the expert was using numbers for theoretically perfect vision. So to most people, the iPhone 4 display will look unpixellated."

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