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Software

Submission + - RMS on Jobs: "I'm not glad he's dead, but I'm glad (latimes.com)

Garabito writes: Richard Stallman, founder of the Free Software Foundation, has posted on his personal site: "As Chicago Mayor Harold Washington said of the corrupt former Mayor Daley, 'I'm not glad he's dead, but I'm glad he's gone.' Nobody deserves to have to die — not Jobs, not Mr. Bill, not even people guilty of bigger evils than theirs. But we all deserve the end of Jobs' malign influence on people's computing." His statement has spurred reaction from the community; some even asking to the Free Software movement to find a new voice.
Space

Submission + - Qu8k: Above the Balloons (ddeville.com) 1

darkjohnson writes: "Lately we've been inundated with 100k' balloon flights and amazing video footage from space — the flights usually taking better than an hour to achieve apogee. Derek Deville took a shortcut to 121k' using a 'home made' Q rocket motor and a ton of engineering genius.

On September 30, 2011 at 11:08am, Qu8k (pronounced "Quake") launched from the Black Rock Desert in Nevada to an altitude of 121,000' in 92 seconds before returning safely to earth.

This small documentary on the flight is probably one of the most brilliant Amateur Rocket videos out there right now.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvDqoxMUroA&feature=share"

Submission + - Mozilla Foundation Releases Mozilla Firefox 7.0 (techspot.com) 2

An anonymous reader writes: Not sure it's actually news, but Mozilla has released Firefox 7.0. It hasn't actually reduced my memory footprint at first glance, but let's hope that the memory usage doesn't keep growing like it used to. We'll also see if ff crashes less often than once every three days or so.
Biotech

Submission + - Scientists replace a small piece of rat brain (smartplanet.com)

V!NCENT writes: We humans are melding with machines. This is not about using machines to amplify our knowledge (the Internet) but actually embedding chips within our bodies, to amplify our thoughts. The cochlear implant, used to augment hearing, is perhaps the best known brain-computer interface but the last decade has seen great leaps, translating even memories and thoughts into digital code. Now scientists out of Tel-Aviv University have managed to build an artificial cerebellum to restore brain function in injured rats.
Medicine

Submission + - Virus kills breast cancer cells in laboratory (psu.edu)

An anonymous reader writes: A nondisease-causing virus kills human breast cancer cells in the laboratory, creating opportunities for potential new cancer therapies, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers who tested the virus on three different breast cancer types that represent the multiple stages of breast cancer development.

Adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV2) is a virus that regularly infects humans but causes no disease. Past studies by the same researchers show that it promotes tumor cell death in cervical cancer cells infected with human papillomavirus. Researchers used an unaltered, naturally occurring version of AAV2 on human breast cancer cells.

Cells have multiple ways of dying. If damage occurs in a healthy cell, the cell turns on production and activation of specific proteins that allow the cell to commit suicide. However, in cancer cells these death pathways often are turned off, while the proteins that allow the cell to divide and multiply are stuck in the "on" position.

One way to fight cancer is to find ways to turn on these death pathways, which is what researchers believe is happening with the AAV2 virus.

In tissue culture dishes in the laboratory, 100 percent of the cancer cells are destroyed by the virus within seven days, with the majority of the cell death proteins activated on the fifth day. In another study, a fourth breast cancer derived cell line, which is the most aggressive, required three weeks to undergo cell death.

Programming

Submission + - Shen 1.7 / Qi Lisp II++ released (google.com)

raould writes: If you like advanced functional programming, this is of interest. Shen is a new version of Qi Lisp II. It is designed to support functional programming (and more) across a range of platforms. The first ones targeted are JavaScript, Scheme, and Lisp. Shen makes Qi more portable. Qi is "a language implemented on top of Common Lisp which uses sequent calculus to provide a level of type security whose scope exceeds that of conventional functional languages. Qi combines this with an environment that gives access to pattern-directed functional programming, compiler-compiler technology and logic programming via Prolog. In trials Qi programs often proved to beat hand coded Common Lisp programs both in terms of compactness (lines of code) and speed."
Google

Submission + - The Looming Video Codec Fight (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: "With both Apple and Microsoft promoting HTML5 standards, you'd think that there would be joy in software freedom land. But instead there's another fight brewing. 'While it is true that HTML5 video is a step in the right direction, we also have to take into consideration the underlying codecs used to deliver the video content,' says blogger Brian Proffitt. The problem, says Proffitt, is that Microsoft and Apple's browsers will be supporting only the proprietary H.264 video codec by default. But Google supports only the WebM (VP8) and Ogg Theora codecs. 'So, basically, if Ogg Theora content starts making a dent in Apple and Microsoft's bottom line, or that of the MPEG LA's, then expect to see a lawsuit or two headed Google's way after 2015,' concludes Proffitt."
Google

Submission + - The Great JavaScript Debate: Improve It Or Kill It (infoworld.com)

snydeq writes: "Recent announcements from Google and Intel appear to have JavaScript headed toward a crossroads, as Google seeks to replace the lingua franca of the client-side Web with Dart and Intel looks to extend it with River Trail. What seems clear, however, is that as 'developers continue to ask more and more of JavaScript, its limitations are thrown into sharp relief,' begging the question, 'Will the Web development community continue to work to make JavaScript a first-class development platform, despite its failings? Or will it take the "nuclear option" and abandon it for greener pastures? The answer seems to be a little of both.'"
Intel

Submission + - Dell to Build 10-Petaflop Supercomputer For Scienc (hpcwire.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) has revealed plans to deploy a cutting-edge petascale supercomputer courtesy of a $27.5 million dollar NSF award. Built by Dell, the system will consist of 2 petaflops of Sandy Bridge-EP processors with an 8 petaflop boost from Intel's Many Integrated Core (MIC) coprocessors. The machine is scheduled to boot up in late 2012 and be ready for production in January 2013.
Medicine

Submission + - High-Tech T-Shirt Monitors Patients' Vitals (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: Hospitals may soon have a new, noninvasive way to track the health and movements of their patients. Researchers from la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid have developed an "intelligent T-shirt" that not only monitors vital signs in real time, but also locates individuals on hospital grounds within a 2-yard margin of error.

Dubbed LOBIN, the washable garment comprises a GPS unit, a thermometer, and an accelerometer that determine a patient's temperature, relative position, and level of physical activity. The shirt also includes electrodes to measure and record bioelectric signals such as electrocardiograms.

Yahoo!

Submission + - Yahoo Blocks Emails About Wall Street Protest (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: "People trying to email information about the Wall Street protests on Monday using Yahoo mail, found themselves on the receiving end of messages from Yahoo claiming 'suspicious activity'. ThinkProgress.org has a YouTube video of users trying to send emails that mention the 'OccupyWallSt.org' web site, which seemed to be the magic phrase to get your email blocked. Via Twitter, Yahoo announced the blockage was now fixed, but 'there may be residual delays.'"

Comment Re:all good technology kills jobs (Score 1) 308

There is no such thing as killing all jobs because there is always more work to do. Yet, even if we ran out of work to do, who cares? A job is a means to an end, not an end in itself. I wouldn't mind living in a world where robots do all the work, and I can just have fun.

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