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Feed Engadget: Lenovo says "no thanks" to Vista for 2008 Olympics (engadget.com)

Filed under: Desktops, Laptops

Poor Vista, you really can't buy a break. First you've got legions of users angrily awaiting a decent update for a whole slew of problems, then there's the CEOs taking pot-shots at you, and now, Lenovo, supplier of the 2008 Olympic Games' computer systems says it's sticking with XP. Word on the street is that all vital computing tasks for the Games will be handled on XP-enabled PCs, while some internet lounges used by athletes will be equipped with Vista systems. According to Yang Yuanqing, chairman of Lenovo, "the Olympic Games require mature, stable technologies and it's not a place to try new technologies." Yang, we're pretty sure a legion of Vista users feel similarly about their desktops. You can almost hear Microsoft's sharp intake of breath from here.

[Via Slashdot]

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!


Feed Science Daily: Nicotinic Receptors May Be Important Targets For Treatment Of Multiple Addiction (sciencedaily.com)

Researchers discovered that rats most likely to self-administer addictive drugs had a particular receptor in the brain that is more responsive than the same receptor in rats least likely to self-administer addictive drugs. This receptor, known as the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, increases excitability within in the brain's reward centers. In the animals that were more likely to take addictive drugs, the effects of these receptors were much stronger, leading to more profound excitation of the cells and pathways associated with reward.

Feed Science Daily: Toddlers Are Capable Of Introspection (sciencedaily.com)

Preschoolers are aware of their own thought processes, psychologists demonstrate. They taught 3- and 4-year-olds to communicate their awareness of their thought processes using pictures rather than words. Scientists have previously demonstrated that dolphins, monkeys and even rats can engage in some form of "metacognition," or an awareness of their own thought processes. But developmental psychologists had previously assumed that human children did not develop this capability before about age 5.

Feed Science Daily: Cat Disease Linked To Flame Retardants In Furniture And To Pet Food (sciencedaily.com)

A mysterious epidemic of thyroid disease among pet cats in the United States may be linked to exposure to dust shed from flame retardants in household carpeting, furniture, fabrics and pet food, scientists are reporting. They report evidence linking the disease to exposure to environmental contaminants called polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), which the researchers found to be elevated in blood samples of hyperthyroid cats.
Media

Submission + - Arbitrary deletion of Wikipedia entry

An anonymous reader writes: There is a storm in a teacup brewing over at the Eastgate Systems Wikipedia page. Eastgate is one of the leading hypertext publisher and is also responsible for hypertext tools such as Tinderbox and Storyspace. As described at Eastgate Systems' chief scientist Mark Bernstein's blog , a Wikimedia legal intern seems to have taken it upon himself to delete the article stub associated with Eastgate. When queried about his expertise on hypertext and his rationale for nomination of the article for deletion, his defense is simply "I do not need to. No special knowledge is needed to edit wikipedia."

Feed Engadget: Microsoft to dispute FCC findings on 'white space' device (engadget.com)

Filed under: Wireless

Hot on the heels of the "white space device" test flop of 2007 (i.e., last week's news) Microsoft is regrouping and firing back at the FCC's findings, claiming that the initial prototype was "defective," but a new model works correctly. In an attempt to convince US regulators that use of the soon-to-be-abandoned 700MHz spectrum is "safe" for wireless internet services, Microsoft (along with White Space Coalition cohorts such as Google and Intel) is claiming that the technology is sound and can work side by side with its broadcast television neighbors -- and they have proof. As you'll recall, the first round of tests apparently produced "static" on nearby channels -- leading the FCC to send the coalition packing -- but Redmond is claiming that a new study carried out by the airwave-controlling agency yielded positive results. So, what might have been a major wind-out-of-the-sails-moment for the 700MHz-champions is starting to look more like a healthy gust of air.

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!


Encryption

Submission + - Looking Back at Sweden's Super-Code-Cracker (wired.com)

evanwired writes: "Enigma is the most famous of the Nazi encryption machines, but not the only one — and not the only one successfully cracked. The tale of the T52, or the "Geheimschreiber" (the secret-writer), is equally fascinating, though not nearly so well known. This week at Chaos Communication Camp, a presenter showed what may be the first reconstruction of the decryption technique used by Swedish cryptographer Arne Buerling to break the Siemens-built device. The feat was achieved in two weeks using nothing but pen and paper and produced a reverse-engineered model of the machine itself. It is now regarded by cryptologists as one of the high points of classic code-breaking. Anyone interested in the T52's operations can find a simulator online here. From Wired.com's Threat Level blog."

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