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

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Internet

Submission + - US lags Industrialized nations in bandwidth (usatoday.com)

Anonymous Coward writes: "USA Today relates that US consumer bandwidth lags behind other nations. Data from the Communications Workers of America says we lag far behind. From the article: "Speed matters on the Internet. A 10-megabyte file takes about 15 seconds to download with a 5-megabit connection — fast for the USA. Download time with a 545-kilobit connection, about the entry-level speed in many areas: almost 2½ hours." This data was allegedly taken from 'broadband' users. I could pull 10 megs in 20 minutes with dialup! Are they considering NetZero 'broadband?' My regular cable modem hits 5 megabits, and when I had DSL it wasn't that bad. I'm not sure of the angle here. Perhaps they are looking for more work for the cable-laying contingent of their union."
Databases

Submission + - Q&A with MySQL's Marten Mickos (computerworld.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In a longish interview http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?com mand=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyId=9&articleId=29442 2&intsrc=hm_topic with Computerworld, MySQL's CEO says that the company has internally debated "many times" whether to make its popular open-source database partially closed-source. He also says he promised to welcome Oracle if they built an 'Unbreakable MySQL' clone, like it did with Red Hat Linux. "I would get an endorsement free of charge, and I would get a competitive situation that I easily could win," he said. Mickos also says he believes there is nothing leftist about open-source, reveals that it took him 12 years to finish college (though he ran a tech firm during that time), and that his prior CEO job before MySQL was a failed sports betting dot-com.
Security

Submission + - FBI: Wacky nicknames nab bank robbers (networkworld.com)

coondoggie writes: "So can a nutty, wacky or amusing moniker really help the FBI and other police officials more quickly catch bank robbers? There seems to be some anecdotal evidence from the FBI that says it is so. At least the FBI never seems to be at a loss for calling a bank robber by another name. For example here is a very short list of FBI-named bank bandits the agency has caught or is currently looking for: Ponytail Bandit, Goofy Hat Bandit, Irreconcilable Differences Bandit...The FBI says that these monikers plus the liberal use of still photos and video surveillance and the Web helps that catch bank robbers who last year swiped some $72 million. http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/1679 2"
Spam

Submission + - Mr. and Mrs. Spam (hungarytourism.hu)

Tamas Feher from Hungary writes: "CNN reports that some 200 american people recently became subjects of a targeted e-mail spam attack, which alleged a relative contracted them to a hitman. The message warned that they will be assasinated very soon unless they cough up some 30 to 80 thousand dollars in ransom. Those who disobeyed were harassed with a fake follow-up letter from an "FBI representative in London", warning the recipient that he/she is high up on a kill bill found with a recently arrested mafia messenger. The most resistant victims were even sent an ultimatum, full of personal and family details, ordering the recipient to pay immeditely or they will be retired. The real FBI is investigating this unusual strain of the infamous "nigerian 419" scam.

Here is the full article:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/06/18/lothian.cybercrim e/index.html"

Space

Submission + - Tunguska Impact Crater "Found" (bbc.co.uk)

BigBadBus writes: "An Italian Team is claiming to have found the impact crater resulting from the 1908 Tunguska impact. From the BBC website:
A University of Bologna team says a lake near the epicentre of the blast may be occupying a crater hollowed out by a chunk of rock that hit the ground. Lake Cheko — though shallow — fits the proportions of a small, bowl-shaped impact crater, say the Italy-based scientists. Their investigation of the lake bottom's geology reveals a funnel-like shape not seen in neighbouring lakes. In addition, a geophysics survey of the lake bed has turned up an unusual feature about 10m down which could either be compacted lake sediments or a buried fragment of space rock."
Of course, this is highly controversial, but its a hell of a lot better than the gas eruption theory mentioned in one of Arthur C.Clarke's "Mysterious World" books."

Windows

Submission + - Vista Media Center + CableCard = No TV

notthatwillsmith writes: ATI's internal CableCard readers are finally available, and Maximum PC got hands on time with a couple of Vista-powered systems built using the FCC-mandated technology. The short version? It doesn't work.
Education

Submission + - T. rex was relatively slow, lumbering animal (msn.com)

Lucas123 writes: "A new study found that the typical T. rex was a relatively slow animal running at no more than 25mph, 20 miles an hour slower than the 45mph we often seen depicted in movies such as Jurassic Park, and its inertia would have kept it from turning quickly — even slower than a human being. "We now know that a T. rex would have been front heavy, turned slowly and could manage no more than a leisurely jog," said team leader John Hutchinson of the Royal Veterinary College."
XBox (Games)

Submission + - Microsoft to open Xbox Live to Windows users

TMarvelous writes: "Microsoft announced yesterday that it was extending the online gaming service for its Xbox consoles to the millions of people who use Windows PCs to play games over the Internet, a move that could bolster the popularity — and profits — of video gaming.

Xbox Live, Microsoft's online gaming network that serves some six million Xbox users, is scheduled on May 8 to open its basic and premium features to online PC gamers under the rubric of Games for Windows — Live, Microsoft executives said.

The service coincides with the much-anticipated release of a Windows Vista version of Microsoft's best-selling combat game, Halo 2.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/14/technology/14gam e.html"

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...