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The Media

Sound Bites of the 1908 Presidential Candidates 410

roncosmos writes "Science News has up a feature on the first use of sound recording in a presidential campaign. In 1908, for the first time, presidential candidates recorded their voices on wax cylinders. Their voices could be brought into the home for 35 cents, equivalent to about $8 now. In that pre-radio era, this was the only way, short of hearing a speech at a whistle stop, that you could hear the candidates. The story includes audio recordings from the 1908 candidates, William Jennings Bryan and William Howard Taft. Bryan's speech, on bank failures, seems sadly prescient now. Taft's, on the progress of the Negro, sounds condescending to modern ears but was progressive at the time. There are great images from the campaign; lots of fun."
Idle

Read A Book *NSFW* Screenshot-sm 3

samzenpus writes "Schoolhouse Rock has gotten a lot edgier since I was a kid. At least the message is still good."
NASA

Submission + - Astronauts Prepare to Open Station Room (go.com)

mikesd81 writes: "ABC News reports that the ISS has opened the new station room. Commander Peggy Whitson and astronaut Paolo Nespoli delayed their lunch so the event could happen before the station's orbit temporarily blocked the ability to send a video downlink to Mission Contro. "It's a pleasure to be here in this very beautiful piece of hardware," said Nespoli, who joined Discovery's crew to personally deliver the Italian-made pressurized chamber. Astronauts added the school bus-sized room called Harmony during a 6.5-hour spacewalk Friday, using a robotic arm to lift it from the shuttle's cargo bay and install it on the station. The compartment will serve as the docking port and nerve center for European and Japanese laboratories that will be delivered on the next three shuttle flights. It also will be a power and thermal distribution center, providing air, electricity, water and other systems for the space station. Racks of computer and electronic equipment are already inside the cylinder, which will double as a living space for the crew. The astronauts will have to undo about 700 bolts that held down the equipment during flight to get the room ready. Also time on Saturday has been set aside to inspect Discovery."
User Journal

Journal Journal: [avr] Annoyances

Well, gcc-avr has been trying hard to annoy me all day: firstly, the optimizer seems to be rather over-zealous, optimizing away entire code blocks it thinks does nothing (but which in fact has a profound effect on a routine driven by a timer interrupt). Declaring the variables as 'volatile' as suggested by the documentation had no effect. Putting a useless function call into the code block made it work, or turning optimization off made it work. There are probably some subtleties that I'm miss

Supercomputing

Submission + - NASA to build largest Supercomputer ever (linuxworld.com.au) 1

Onlyodin writes: The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has given the green light to a project that will build the largest ever supercomputer based on Silicon Graphics' (SGI) 512-processor Altix computers.

Called Project Columbia and costing around $160-million, the 10,240-processor system will be used by researchers at the Advanced Supercomputing Facility at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California.

What makes Project Columbia unique is the size of the multiprocessor Linux systems, or nodes, that it clusters together. It is common for supercomputers to be built of thousands of two-processor nodes, but the Ames system uses SGI's NUMAlink switching technology and ProPack Linux operating system enhancements to connect 512-processor nodes, each of which will have more than 1,000G bytes of memory.

Full Story at Linuxworld

NASA

Submission + - Shooting at NASA

pvt_medic writes: News reports are coming in that there has been a shooting at NASA Building 44 at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. Building 44 is a communications and tracking development laboratory on a remote part of Johnson Space Center's sprawling campus, some distance from the Mission Control buildings.
The Internet

Submission + - how to stay anonymous online?

An anonymous reader writes: With recent news about certain industries giving people problems for even legal use of torrent clients and various instances of government snooping etc, I'm wondering how one can stay anonymous and still (without being a jerk abusing the TOR system) being able to download/upload large files?
Space

Submission + - Engineering shortage in US Aerospace and Defense?

braindrainbahrain writes: Yet another story about an engineering shortage, this time in Aerospace and Defense. The AIAA is claiming there will be huge shortages in those industries due to an aging and retiring workforce. Buried deep within TFA , there is talk about outsourcing design services overseas. Will the next (US) moon rocket or fighter plane be designed overseas, or by people holding H1-B visas?
Media

Submission + - Interview with Mark Shuttleworth: Questions needed

Jonathan Roberts writes: "Mark Shuttleworth is to be interviewed on the Questions Please... podcast on the 26th February. The idea is that the host asks the guest questions sent in by YOU. So this is a great chance for you to put a question straight to Mark Shuttleworth and get an answer. If it's anything like past episodes it should be a really interesting listen and release is likely to be either the 27th or 28th February. You can find more information by visiting the site, including contact details for sending in your question. Alternatively you could just send an e-mail straight to yourquestions@questionsplease.org."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Are Sysadmins Really that Bad?

tgbrittai writes: "According to Paul Boutin they are merely an obstacle to be manipulated or outmaneuvered. According to Steve Wozniak they are a lower form of life than a pimp. I've known my share of good and bad sysadmins, programmers and every other professional role out there. But seriously, are sysadmins THAT bad?"
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Boeing Cuts 787 Wireless System-Goes Wired

K7DAN writes: "It appears that state-of-the-art connectivity in Boeing's newest aircraft means a wired, not wireless network. The Seattle Times reports that Boeing has abandoned plans to bring entertainment and information to passengers through a wireless system in its 787 Dreamliner due to possible production delays and potential conflicts with other radios services. A side benefit is an actual reduction in weight using the wired system. Amazingly, the LAN cables needed to connect every seat in the aircraft weigh 150lbs less than all the wireless antennae, access points and thickened ceiling panels required to accommodate a wireless network."
Security

Submission + - Don't fall victim to the 'Free Wi-Fi' scam

DeadlyBattleRobot writes: Quote: "The next time you're at an airport looking for a wireless hot spot, and you see one called "Free Wi-Fi" or a similar name, beware — you may end up being victimized by the latest hot-spot scam hitting airports across the country."

http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?com mand=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9008399&pageNumber =1
Television

Submission + - Who has the best US high definition broadcast

mhollis writes: Gizmodo is featuring a subjective HDTV quality test from the five networks that were sending an HD signal of the President's State of the Union speech. This speech was broadcast using a pool feed, so everyone was deriving their signal from exactly the same source.

According to Gizmodo, CBS won the contest with the highest quality signal. Fox lost, as they did not have an HD feed at all — just widescreen — so their picture looked fuzzy as compared to the other networks. Also judged was sound quality.

And you thought NTSC standard definition television stood for Never Twice the Same Color!

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