Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Two best things about ./ in this story (Score 5, Interesting) 156

THIS story and its comments is why I keep returning to /. despite having the many flaws we all know about.

Take any random idea and code it. Post it on /. and two things happen:

- People find prior art of it, to different degrees of precedence.
- People start finding ways to improve/cheat the system, to different degrees of sophistication, complexity and plausibility.

I mean, seriously. You can argue all you want about this community and its (our?) shortcomings, but you can't deny at some point just having a bunch of geeks or whatever you want to call us, discussing things like this story definitely gets interesting and fun.

Cheers fellow /.ers!

Comment Re:Voice-only texting interfaces and Bad UIs (Score 4, Insightful) 417

I believe the fundamental difference (in this context) between a phone call and text messages is not the input medium (voice/text) but the fact that text messaging is asynchronous. So, what the GP is proposing is a system to communicate by sending/receiving "voice mails" of sorts (without hearing the annoying recorded greeting every time I would hope). One for each message. One of the things that make SMS messages so attractive is not the fact that it's a written message but the fact that I can send it and not worry about an immediate response. And as a receiver of a message, I know I can read it when I want, and even chose to avoid response.

I'm not aware of a system that does what the GP says (althought it shouldn't be too hard) and it seems it could be a nice addition to text messages. I could send the spoken message, but don't need to hear the answer until later.

Comment Re:Translation from journalist-speak (Score 1) 126

Even if journalism bullshit at the moment, it would be really cool if one day actual reconfigurable chips where available. Imagine downloading the configuration for the next Intel chip, and applying it onto the same board as the previous gen. Or maybe even on-the-fly reconfiguring capabilities, such that certain parts of the processor change to suit the needs of instructions currently executing. Maybe part of the processor can work as a GPU if you are gaming, and as a multithreaded-optimized config if you need heavy computing. Running financial simulation? reconfigure to optimize for it, etc.
 
That would be really neat! computation power could be used much more efficiently, no?

Submission + - The Human Brain Project recieves up to $1.34 billion. (humanbrainproject.eu)

TheRedWheelbarrow writes: The singularity looms as the Human Brain Project gets up to $1.34 billion in funding.

"The challenge in AI is to design algorithms that can produce intelligent behaviour and to use them to build intelligent machines. It doesn’t matter whether the algorithms are biologically realistic – what matters is that they work – the behaviour they produce. In the HBP, we’re doing something completely different...we will base the technology on what we actually know about the brain and its circuitry."

Bug

Linux: Booting Via UEFI Can Brick Samsung Notebooks 232

wehe writes "Heise News reports today some Samsung notebooks can be turned into a brick if booted just one time via UEFI into Linux. Even the firmware does not boot anymore. Some reports in the Ubuntu bug tracker system report that such notebooks can not be recovered without replacing the main board. Other Linux distributions may be affected as well. Kernel developers are discussing a change in the Samsung-laptop driver." It appears even Samsung is having trouble tracking down the problem (from the article): "According to Canonical's Steve Langasek, Samsung developers have been attempting to develop a firmware update to prevent the problem for several weeks. Langasek is advising users to start Ubuntu installation on Samsung notebooks from an up-to-date daily image, in which the Ubuntu development team has taken precautions to prevent the problem from arising. It is, however, not completely clear that these measures are sufficient."

Submission + - South Korea Launches Satellite into Orbit; Third Time's the Charm

An anonymous reader writes: Iran may have launched a monkey into space, but now South Korea has launched its first satellite. On Wednesday, the country announced the success of its mission only weeks after a similar launch by North Korea.
The 140-ton rocket, named Naro, took off from a space center on the south coast at 4 p.m. local time. It was a flawless takeoff, a stark contrast from the two previous attempts to launch satellites in 2009 and 2010. Both had to be aborted due to last-minute technical problems.
Twitter

Submission + - Was Vine Designed With Porn In Mind? (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: "Twitter's brand new Vine video service, designed to deliver animated GIF-like short clips, has already hit its first controversy: Turns out some people are using it to post DIY porn! While this might seem like a natural outgrowth of any service that lets users put their own content on the Internet, there's some evidence that smut was part of Twitter's plans for the service all along."
Businesses

Submission + - BitTorrent Launches Dropbox Alternative With Unlimited Storage (ibtimes.com)

redletterdave writes: "On Friday morning, BitTorrent launched a new free public service called BitTorrent Sync, which allows users to securely backup and sync files over the Web using BitTorrent’s platform as both a backup and shared drive. BitTorrent Sync is also highly secure and works across all devices, but unlike competing services like Box or Dropbox, BitTorrent Sync doesn’t use the cloud (which means that no third-party has access to one’s files), and also has no storage limits."
Android

Submission + - WindowsAndroid Lets You Run Android 4.0 Natively On Your PC

An anonymous reader writes: WindowsAndroid is a very cool tool from the Beijing-based startup SocketeQ that lets you run Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) as a native application on your on Windows Vista, Windows 7, or Windows 8 machine. The creators tell us they have a deep background in virtualization, operating system, and graphics technologies, and have been working on the project for years. Essentially, WindowsAndroid allows you not only to execute Android apps on your Windows computer, but also use the browser, not to mention every other component of the operating system.
Electronic Frontier Foundation

Submission + - DMCA exemption ends on Jan 26th. Unlocking a cellphone becomes illegal (mashable.com)

Acapulco writes: Apparently an exemption to the DMCA, determined by the Librarian of Congress will expire this Saturday, January 26th, which will make unlocking phones illegal (although not jailbreaking).

From the article:

"The new rule against unlocking phones won't be a problem for everybody, though. For example, Verizon's iPhone 5 comes out of the box already unlocked, and AT&T will unlock a phone once it is out of contract."

And:

"Advocacy group the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) questions whether the DMCA has the right to determine who can unlock a phone. In an email to TechNewsDaily, EFF attorney Mitch Stoltz said, "Arguably, locking phone users into one carrier is not at all what the DMCA was meant to do. It's up to the courts to decide." "

Also:

"Christopher S. Reed from the U.S. Copyright Office noted in an email to TechNewsDaily that "only a consumer, who is also the owner of the copy of software on the handset under the law, may unlock the handset." "

Slashdot Top Deals

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

Working...