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Encryption

Submission + - The HTTPS Everywhere Firefox Extension (eff.org)

Peter Eckersley writes: EFF and Tor have announced a public beta of HTTPS Everywhere, a Firefox plugin that automatically encrypts your Google searches as well as requests to several other sites, including Wikipedia, Twitter, Identica, Facebook, some major newspapers, and a number of smaller search engines. This plugin makes it much easier to use encryption with sites that support it, but not by default.

For us, this is part of an ongoing campaign to turn the unencrypted web of the past into the encrypted web of tomorrow.

Hardware

Submission + - Hadron Collider Spurs Use of Superconductive Cable (earthandindustry.com)

sprinkletown writes: They used over 7600 km of this superconductive cable in the LHC, weighing only about 1200 tons. The total length of the filaments used if laid end to end would stretch "5 times to the sun and back with enough left over for a few trips to the moon."

On top of material efficiency, these highly advanced super-conductive cables offer tremendous gains in energy efficiency, which will play a critical role in the greening of our energy grid.

Government

Submission + - FEMA & DHS Fund "Disaster Hero" Game (gamepolitics.com)

eldavojohn writes: In the amazing world of edutainment, the United States government has decided that a children's game is needed in educating children about what to do before, during and after an emergency or hazardous event. Collect an emergency kit! Create an emergency plan! Be informed of what to do! Suffer from heat exhaustion inside the Superdome! ... Wait, what? Oh, I guess FEMA omitted that last one. Disaster Hero! Coming in 2011--plenty of time before 2012.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft to add yet another smartphone OS this ye (infoworld.com)

GMGruman writes: Someone at Microsoft either really loves mobile operating systems or can't make up his mind as to which to use, because Microsoft today announced yet another mobile OS, its fifth. The new Windows Embedded Handheld OS will succeed Windows Mobile 6.5 and run on at least some existing Windows Mobile smartphones. It is not the same mobile OS, known as Windows Phone 7, that Microsoft earlier this year said would replace Windows Mobile and break with it in terms of compatibility so Microsoft could better compete with the iPhone and Google Android OS.
Bug

Submission + - Latest Microsoft Patch Wreaks Havoc on Sharepoint (infoworld.com)

snydeq writes: "Microsoft's latest Black Tuesday SharePoint patch is causing Windows SharePoint Servers to lock up, according to a report from InfoWorld. There does not appear to be a single solution to the problem, which Microsoft has yet to officially acknowledge. Compounding the problem is a bug that prevents patch KB 983444 from being uninstalled. 'Patching gurus recommend that anyone who's encountered this problem call Microsoft support and file a problem report. Immediately. Until the level of clamor reaches a critical point, Microsoft may not have sufficient impetus to fix the patch.'"
NASA

Submission + - SpaceX Falcon 9 Relatively Cheap to NASA's New Pad (motherboard.tv)

An anonymous reader writes: As debate over the future of spaceflight rages on – and as the axe all but falls on NASA’s mission back to the moon and beyond – the successful launch of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 two weeks ago proved at least one of the virtues of the private option: it’s a heckava lot cheaper than government-funded rides to space.

In fact, the whole system was built for less than the cost of the service tower that was to be used for NASA’s proposed future spaceflight vehicle (yup, the service tower is finished, but the rocket isn’t, and the whole program may well be cancelled anyway).

Privacy

Submission + - AT&T Show How Not to Handle a Data Breach (threatpost.com)

Trailrunner7 writes: Very few customers care a whit about the gory details of the attack that exposed more than 114,000 email addresses. They couldn't care less whether the "malicious hackers" used some insanely creative tactic that would make Mark Dowd's head spin or whether they just found a list of email addresses in a Dumpster. What they care about is the outcome, and the outcome here is a Dumpster fire.

It's all well and good that AT&T identified the problem and fixed it. That's a given. It should not be the meat of your press release. It should be the last paragraph, following a detailed apology and a promise to do better. Many people in the security and privacy communities have been sharply critical of AT&T for its response, and rightly so. This is precisely how not to respond to an incident like this.

Government

Submission + - US Gov't seeks "absolute power" to shut down 'Net (prisonplanet.com)

pm3 writes: Joe Lieberman is pushing legislation that will grant Obama (and future administrations) the power to shut down the Internet. Setting aside the technological hurdles that they would face, should our elected officials be given this clearly unconstitutional power? I'm sure Hugo Chavez would be envious.

Submission + - The Open Source Server Room 1

Compu486 writes: The folks over at sproutboard.com have started an initiative to create an open source line of server room equipment.
"The server room environmental monitoring system is a low cost high performance device with the same onboard features as commercial devices costing hundreds of dollars more. In addition to a low cost platform we will provide low cost sensors for many important devices to insure your equipment stays safe and sound. "
Definitely worth the read: Open Source Server Room Monitoring System
Image

Study Shows Monkeys Like Watching TV 103

According to a Japanese study, monkeys are not immune to the siren call of the idiot box. It seems rhesus monkeys enjoy watching videos of circus animals. From the article: "The study found that when the monkey was witnessing the acrobatic performances of circus animals on a television screen, the frontal lobe area of its brain became vigorously active. The activity in such an area was significant in reflecting the monkey's pleasure, as the human equivalent is a neurological area associated with triggering delight in a baby when it sees the smile of its mother."
The Military

Submission + - Wikileaks Prepares Another Air-Strike Video (thinq.co.uk)

Stoobalou writes: Whistleblowing website WikiLeaks is said to be readying footage of a US air-strike in Afghanistan that may have killed as many as 140 civilians, including 92 children.

The development comes in the the wake of the release of the video of another of a US attack in Baghdad, which clearly embarrassed US military chiefs.

Intel

Why Intel Wants To Network Your Clothes Dryer 330

An anonymous reader writes "Intel has shown off a working prototype of a small box that, among other things, can monitor your clothes dryer to see how much it's contributing to your power bill. The Intelligent Home Energy Management proof-of-concept device is a small box with an 11.56-inch OLED touchscreen that is designed to act as an electronic dashboard for monitoring energy use in the home. By equipping devices like home entertainment systems and clothes dryers with wireless networked power adapters, the system can actually report back the power draw for a particular power point. Leave the house, and it can make sure power-draining devices like that plasma TV are turned off. It is unlikely the device will enter production (there are apparently only four in existence), however this story about the box shows something we can expect to see in the home of tomorrow. Ultimately, it's not only about saving money, but also reducing load on the electricity grid by removing needless power use."
Math

Submission + - Deformable Liquid Mirrors for Adaptive Optics (technologyreview.com)

eldavojohn writes: Want to make a great concave mirror for your telescope? Put a drop of mercury in a bowl and spin the bowl. The mercury will spread out to a concave reflective surface smoother than anything we can make with plain old glass right now. The key problem in this situation is that the bowl will always have to point straight up. MIT's Technology Review is analyzing a team's success in combating problems with bringing liquid mirrors into the practical applications of astronomy. To fight the gravity requirement, the team used a ferromagnetic liquid coated with a metal-like film and very strong magnetic fields to distort the surface of that liquid as they needed. But this introduces new non-linear problems of control when trying to sync up several of these mirrors similar to how traditional glass telescopes use multiple hexagon shaped mirrors mounted on actuators. The team has fought past so many of these problems plaguing liquid mirrors that they produced a proof of concept liquid mirror just five centimeters across with ninety-one actuators cycling at one Kilohertz and the ability to linearize the response of the liquid. And with that, liquid mirrors take a giant leap closer to practicality.
Math

Submission + - First replicating creature spawned in simulator (newscientist.com)

Calopteryx writes: "This is arguably the single most impressive and important pattern ever devised," says a Game of Life enthusiast. New Scientist has a story on a self-replicating entity which inhabits the mathematical universe known as the Game of Life. The existence of Gemini could help us understand how life on Earth began, or inspire strategies to build tiny computers

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