Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Submission + - A Material Found To Carry Current In a way Never Before Observed (phys.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Scientists at the Florida State University-headquartered National High Magnetic Field Laboratory have discovered a behavior in materials called cuprates that suggests they carry current in a way entirely different from conventional metals such as copper. The research, published today in the journal Science, adds new meaning to the materials' moniker, "strange metals." Cuprates are high-temperature superconductors (HTS), meaning they can carry current without any loss of energy at somewhat warmer temperatures than conventional, low-temperature superconductors (LTS). Although scientists understand the physics of LTS, they haven't yet cracked the nut of HTS materials. Exactly how the electrons travel through these materials remains the biggest mystery in the field.

For their research on one specific cuprate, lanthanum strontium copper oxide (LSCO), a team led by MagLab physicist Arkady Shekhter focused on its normal, metallic state—the state from which superconductivity eventually emerges when the temperature dips low enough. This normal state of cuprates is known as a "strange" or "bad" metal, in part because the electrons don't conduct electricity particularly well. Scientists have studied conventional metals for more than a century and generally agree on how electricity travels through them. They call the units that carry charge through those metals "quasiparticles," which are essentially electrons after factoring in their environment. These quasiparticles act nearly independently of each other as they carry electric charge through a conductor. But does quasiparticle flow also explain how electric current travels in the cuprates? At the National MagLab's Pulsed Field Facility in Los Alamos, New Mexico, Shekhter and his team investigated the question. They put LSCO in a very high magnetic field, applied a current to it, then measured the resistance. The resulting data revealed that the current cannot, in fact, travel via conventional quasiparticles, as it does in copper or doped silicon. The normal metallic state of the cuprate, it appeared, was anything but normal.

Submission + - Blockchain, Once Seen As a Corporate Cure-All, Suffers Slowdown (bloomberg.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Corporate America’s love affair with all things blockchain may be cooling. A number of software projects based on the distributed ledger technology will be wound down this year, according to Forrester Research Inc. And some companies pushing ahead with pilot tests are scaling back their ambitions and timelines. In 90 percent of cases, the experiments will never become part of a company’s operations, the firm estimates. Even Nasdaq Inc., a high-profile champion of blockchain and cryptocurrencies, hasn’t moved as quickly as hoped. The exchange operator, which talked in 2016 about deploying blockchain for voting in shareholder meetings and private-company stock issuance, isn’t using the technology in any widely deployed projects yet. So far, IBM and Microsoft have grabbed more than half of blockchain spending.

Submission + - ICE attorney sent to prison for stealing Identities of deported immigrants (seattletimes.com)

McGruber writes: Raphael Sanchez, the former chief attorney for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Seattle, was sentenced Thursday to four years in federal prison for stealing the identities of people ICE was trying to deport or exclude from the U.S. and using the information to defraud banks and credit-card companies.

Department of Justice (DOJ) trial attorney Jessica Harvey argued that Sanchez’s actions amounted to a “profane and profound violation of the trust of the American public,” exploiting some of the most vulnerable people in society “to line his pockets.” Most of the victims, she said, were about to be deported and would never have a chance to report, let alone repair, the fraud.

Sanchez also lied to the Internal Revenue Service and claimed three of his victims as dependents to obtain deductions.

Comment Re:My take on it as a large creator (Score 1) 308

If you're willing to divulge, since you mentioned that you'd only lose about $100 if you needed to take a day off, what's a ballpark average of how much you make for an hour of work? Are we talking $100 / hour or like (what I suspect is the case) $15-$20 / hour? If you've done all the work to get where you're at, I'm assuming you've figured out how to make the process pretty efficient; if, after having spent the time to learn and implement a reasonably streamlined approach (for which we'll assume you were paid nothing at the time but get it back efficiency-wise for all future content) you're only pulling down $20 / hour for your work, how do these guys that haven't put in that investment think they can at all do this full time as a primary income source?

It reminds me of something I heard a while ago that most drug dealers actually make less than minimum wage when you break it down - sure, some make enough to justify the risk and all that comes with it, but for 99% of the drug dealers out there, they'd be better off taking a minimum wage job and also get the upshot of not taking on the risk for such little reward. It seems to me that I must not know enough about the industry to understand what the strategy is here that gives these content creators the notion that they can make a full time living from this.

Submission + - Descent creators get together to create a spiritual successor called "Overload" (steampowered.com)

t0qer writes: In the early days of PC gaming, there was 3 major titles. Doom, Duke Nukem, and Descent. Descent was the first game to have true 3d environments and enemies, whereas Doom/Duke was considered "2.5d" Even though Descent never gained the popularity of Quake or Doom, it's had a dedicated fanbase that has continued playing and updating the game over the last 20 years.

The original programmers got together, and created a "Spiritual Successor" called Overload. Already garnering mostly postive reviews on Steam, the game features the same controls and overall feel of the original Descent, but without the frustration of having to set IRQ, DMA, and port jumpers for your sound blaster.

Submission + - SPAM: Critical Linux Flaw Opens the Door to Full Root Access

lod123 writes: Red Hat has patched a vulnerability affecting the DHCP client packages that shipped with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 and 7. A successful exploit could give an attacker root access and full control over enterprise endpoints.

According to an alert issued Wednesday from US-CERT, the critical-rated flaw, first reported by Google researcher Felix Wilhelm, would “allow attackers to use malicious DHCP server responses to execute arbitrary commands on target systems over the local network,” if those systems use NetworkManager and are configured to obtain dynamic IP addresses.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - One of the Milky Way's fastest stars is an invader from another galaxy (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit writes: On 25 April, the European Space Agency released a data set gathered by the Gaia satellite containing the motions, and much more, of 1.3 billion stars. Astronomers have immediately sifted the data for fast-moving stars. They are prized as forensic tools: When rewound, their trajectories point back to the violent events that launched them. Last week, one team reported the discovery of three white dwarfs—the dying embers of sunlike stars—hurtling through the galaxy at thousands of kilometers per second, perhaps flung out from supernovae explosions. Another group reported more than two dozen fast-moving stars, some apparently kicked out by our galaxy’s central black hole. And a third has confirmed that a star blazing through the outskirts of the Milky Way actually hails from another galaxy altogether, the Large Magellanic Cloud. The flood of discoveries has sent astronomers racing to their telescopes to check and classify the swift objects, says Harvard University astronomer James Guillochon.

Submission + - A Neural Network Simulation of a 1mm Nematode is Taught to Balance a Pole

ClockEndGooner writes: Researchers at the Technische Universität Wein have created a simulation of a simple worm's neural network, and have been able to replicate its natural behavior to completely mimic the worm's natural reflexive behavior. According to the article, using a simple neural network of 300 neurons, the simulation of "the worm can find its way, eat bacteria and react to certain external stimuli. It can, for example, react to a touch on its body. A reflexive response is triggered and the worm squirms away. This behaviour is determined by the worm's nerve cells and the strength of the connections between them. When this simple reflex network is recreated on a computer, the simulated worm reacts in exactly the same way to a virtual stimulation – not because anybody programmed it to do so, but because this kind of behaviour is hard-wired in its neural network." Using the same neural network without adding any additional nerve cells, Mathias Lechner, Radu Grosu, and Ramin Hasani were able to have the nematode simulation learn to balance a pole "just by tuning the strength of the synaptic connections. This basic idea (tuning the connections between nerve cells) is also the characteristic feature of any natural learning process."

Submission + - RPCS3, PS3 emulation on PC is real (kingofgng.com)

KingofGnG writes: Five years ago, the PlayStation 3 emulation promised by RPCS3 seemed like a dream still far away from becoming a reality. Indeed the aforementioned open source project had almost nothing interesting to say at least until the past year, but when the stars aligned and the reverse engineering-loving developers started to get serious everything changed. Nowadays RPCS3 can show that emulation of the powerful seventh generation Sony console is something real, a good number of games representing PS3’s rich software library is playable with no particular issues even though there is still a lot of work to do.

Submission + - Google VP Threatens Whistleblowers as Internal Culture War Escalates

An anonymous reader writes: In a scathing internal memo, Google Senior Vice President Urs Holzle threatened employees with retaliation for disclosing evidence of internal misconduct to outside parties. The threat comes at the heels of a witch hunt for the dozens of so-called "leakers" who provided information used in the pending class action lawsuit over workplace politicization at the search giant.

Submission + - SPAM: Can Government Officials Have You Arrested for Speaking to Them?

schwit1 writes: If a citizen speaks at a public meeting and says something a politician doesn’t like, can the citizen be arrested, cuffed, and carted off to the hoosegow?

Suppose that, during this fraught encounter, the citizen violates some law—even by accident, even one no one has ever heard of, even one dug up after the fact—does that make her arrest constitutional?

Deyshia Hargrave, meet Fane Lozman. You need to follow his case.

Hargrave is a language arts teacher in Kaplan, Louisana. She was arrested Monday after she questioned school-district policy during public comment at a school board meeting.

She asked why the superintendent of schools was receiving a five-figure raise when local teachers had not had a permanent pay increase in a decade. As she was speaking, the school-board president slammed his gavel, and a police officer told her to leave. She left, but once she went into the hall, the officer took her to the ground, handcuffed her, and arrested her for “remaining after having been forbidden” and “resisting an officer.”

Fane Lozman, whose case will be argued in front of the Supreme Court on February 27, faced the same fate at a meeting of the Riviera Beach, Florida, city council in November 2006. Lozman, remarkably enough, has made his way to the high court more or less without assistance twice in the past four years, arguing two different aspects of his acrimonious dispute with the Riviera Beach city government. The first case, which Lozman won, asked whether his motorless plywood “floating home” was actually a “vessel” subject to federal admiralty law. (Answer, via Justice Stephen Breyer: “Um, no.”) The second case is about police tactics at public meetings; its result could make a profound difference to citizens like Hargrave who want to talk back to local officials without a trip to jail.

Remember, plaintiffs must show that retaliation was the motive for the arrest. (In Lozman, that wasn’t hard: Meeting transcripts showed that the council wanted to “intimidate” Lozman and let him “feel the unwarranted heat.”) Unlike prosecutors, police officers don’t have immunity, and neither do elected officials who order them to silence citizens. There’s no “presumption” that an arrest is based on “legitimate grounds.”

Much of federal civil-rights law is set up to deter this kind of official bully-boy tactics. And a glimpse at any given front page in 2018 should convince even a cloistered Supreme Court justice that police attacks on free speech are still a problem.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - Researchers now able to reconstruct past ocean temperatures (ucsd.edu)

RoccamOccam writes: There is a new way to measure the average temperature of the ocean thanks to researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego. In an article published in the latest issue of the journal Nature, geoscientist Jeff Severinghaus and colleagues at Scripps Oceanography and institutions in Switzerland and Japan detailed their ground-breaking approach.

“This method is a radically new way to measure change in total ocean heat,” said Severinghaus. “It takes advantage of the fact that the atmosphere is well-mixed, so a single measurement anywhere in the world can give you the answer.”

In the study, the scientists measured values of the noble gases argon, krypton, and xenon in air bubbles captured inside ice in Antarctica. As the oceans warm, krypton and xenon are released into the atmosphere in known quantities. The ratio of these gases in the atmosphere therefore allows for the calculation of average global ocean temperature.

“Our precision is about 0.2 C (0.4 F) now, and the warming of the past 50 years is only about 0.1 C,” Severinghaus said, adding that advanced equipment can provide more precise measurements, allowing scientists to use this technique to track the current warming trend in the world’s oceans.

Slashdot Top Deals

Never ask two questions in a business letter. The reply will discuss the one you are least interested, and say nothing about the other.

Working...