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PlayStation (Games)

US Air Force Buying Another 2,200 PS3s 144

bleedingpegasus sends word that the US Air Force will be grabbing up 2,200 new PlayStation 3 consoles for research into supercomputing. They already have a cluster made from 336 of the old-style (non-Slim) consoles, which they've used for a variety of purposes, including "processing multiple radar images into higher resolution composite images (known as synthetic aperture radar image formation), high-def video processing, and 'neuromorphic computing.'" According to the Justification Review Document (DOC), "Once the hardware configuration is implemented, software code will be developed in-house for cluster implementation utilizing a Linux-based operating software."
Security

Submission + - Online job apps raise fears of identity theft (pcauthority.com.au)

Slatterz writes: People who send their CVs to online job sites may be putting themselves at risk of identity theft according to a fraud prevention experiment. A fake job hunting website called Denis Atlas was set up and an ad sent out to a national newspaper, inviting people interested in a job as an office manager to send their CVs in online. 107 people fell into the trap, submitting CVs laden with personal data without giving it a second thought. Apparently, 61 of the CVs even held enough personal information to allow identity thieves to apply for a credit card.
Google

Submission + - GSOC - Accepted Students List Announced (blogspot.com)

kulbirsaini writes: "Google has finally announced the list of accepted students for the Google Summer of Code 2008. A significant rise in number of student applications, number of organization and the number of accepted students. Google is funding more than 1100 students this year. For more, read here"
Earth

Submission + - Green technology hype can mislead IT shops (networkworld.com)

jbrodkin writes: "A question for the eve of Earth Day: Has "green" technology been overhyped? Global warming fears have put a spotlight on rapidly rising energy use in data centers. Computer hardware and software vendors, sensing a financial bonanza and opportunity to appear virtuous, have flooded the market with so-called green products. Some IT customers say they are either overwhelmed, or simply dismiss vendors' green claims. Enterprise architect Samuel Ramos of the Oregon Department of Transportation says he thinks vendors like to "shine up" old products and sell them with a green tag. "It is deceiving," he says."
Space

BLAST! Telescope Documentary Premieres Tuesday 10

Xandu writes "A documentary film about the BLAST balloon-borne telescope is about to premiere at the Toronto Hot Docs film festival. BLAST is a submillimeter telescope that floats on a balloon 37km in the air while observing the earliest star-formation and earliest galaxies. Its two science flights have been covered on Slashdot, the first from Kiruna, Sweden and the second from McMurdo Station, Antarctica. Virtually all the software used on BLAST is open source, and the kst display program has been discussed here as well. If you live in or near Toronto, it's showing twice, Tuesday evening and Saturday afternoon. The film contrasts the science with the human element and hardships endured while working in such exotic locations. Naturally, the movie trailer is online."
XBox (Games)

Submission + - Microsoft tries to get Gaming Writer Fired (blogspot.com)

Anonymous Coward writes: "Video Games Journalist Ben Paddon recently moved from the UK to the USA and has been encountering some problems with his Xbox Live account. These problems have escalated, and now instead of trying to help him, Microsoft are trying to make him loose his job

"I write for a couple of gaming websites at the moment — RealVG, which I helped found in 2006, and GamePartisan, which I've been writing for on and off since 2003. My relationship with GP has seen its ups and downs, but right now it's at a high point and I can only see good things going for that site in the future. So, apparently, do Microsoft.

Yesterday, A Microsoft rep spoke with Jonny DeViney, the Editor in Chief of GamePartisan. While I can't discuss the ins and outs of what the phone call involved, I can tell you that Microsoft asked DeViney to drop me from the Editorial team — to "remove any potential sources of contention" between the site and Microsoft. I'm not sure what DeViney's answer was exactly, but the general jist of it from what I've heard is that he told them to take their hand and go fuck themselves.

Not content with denying me my request to be able to, y'know, pay for my Xbox Live services, they've now taken to flat-out attacking me by trying to lose me a writing job. Well, no. I'm very thankful that DeViney has decided to back me on this one"

See this thread for the whole saga. I for one am vetoing Microsoft products from my blog until this issue is acceptably resolved, with a full appology from Microsoft."

United States

White House Gets Green by Putting Federal Budget Online 206

coondoggie writes "Looking to save $1 million, 20 tons of paper, or close to 500 trees, the White House said today President Bush's 2009 Federal Budget will for the first time be posted online. The E-Budget will be available for downloading at the Office of Management and Budget Web site on Feb. 4. Typically the White House has paper-bombed congress and anyone else who wanted to read the budget with a tome which can reach 3,000 pages and weighed multiple pounds each."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Dead man taken to cash check in NYC (nytimes.com)

tubegeek writes: A corpse was wheeled to a check cashing store in NYC by his roommate and a friend, who attempted to cash the dead man's Social Security check.
Privacy

Submission + - Is the era of anonymous drinking coming to an end? (thejemreport.com)

Anonymous Howard writes: If you visit a lot of bars and restaurants, you've likely crossed paths with drivers license scanners — machines that supposedly verify that your license is valid. In actuality, many of these scanners are designed to record your license information in addition to verifying them, and those that authenticate against a remote database are creating a record of when and where you buy alcohol. Not only that, but they're not even particularly effective — the bar code on your license uses an open, documented standard and can be rewritten to change your age or picture. Collecting our driver's license information is one thing, but collecting data about our personal drinking habits is not only a violation of, according to the ACLU representative quoted in the article, privacy and civil liberties, but this "drinking record" could also create problems for people in civil and criminal lawsuits as proof of alcohol purchases in DUI cases or evidence of alcoholism in divorce lawsuits.
AMD

Submission + - AMD Delays High-End Phenoms, Yet Again (extremetech.com)

writertype writes: "ExtremeTech is reporting that AMD has delayed its high-end Phenom processors until the second quarter 2008 to make room for a brand new, low-power version of the chip. This is both significant and disappointing; it adds a new verse to the litany of bad news, leaving the editors to wonder (like everyone else) whether AMD is doomed. In November, Jason Cross wrote that AMD has but a narrow window of opportunity before Intel's 'Nehalem" hits, and needs to execute flawlessly to exploit the opportunity. So far, it hasn't happened. So who's at fault?"
Programming

Submission + - Managing Memory Leaks (C/C++)

cbart387 writes: I'm sure many of us have encountered a memory leak while testing programs. Memory leaks that only manifest over 'loops' of running a segment of code. This is what I encountered with a C++ project I am currently working on. I got it under control by running Valgrind.** Valgrind, to me, seems to do a decent job with memory leak detection. Also it is highly customizable and has other detection besides memory leaks. My question is, what are the slashdotters preferred tools to use for memory leak detection?

**I used wikipedia since Valgrind's server seems flakey. Valgrind's site is here if you wish to take a chance.
Communications

Submission + - Congress to Probe FCC with Red Hot Questions (arstechnica.com)

SirLurksAlot writes: According to an article on Ars Technica it appears that Congress is planning to question the FCC on the way regarding how the commission is run. From the article: "The FCC — and Chairman Kevin Martin in particular — are in hot water with Congress over the way that the Commission is run. While Martin was at CES, telling all who would listen that the FCC will investigate Comcast's traffic-shaping practices, the House Energy and Commerce Committee announced a formal investigation of the FCC. The news couldn't be more welcome to the industries that the FCC regulates."
Google

Submission + - Satellite Dish Alignment with Google Maps (dishpointer.com)

Alan writes: "Anyone who ever installed a satellite dish knows how frustrating it is to point the dish at the right satellite. Here is a unique tool which actually shows a satellite image of your house and then draws a line where to point the dish. That easy and always spot on. It's a pretty neat use of Google Maps and comes with many other features, such as dish size calculator, satellite and channel charts, and a magnetic variation calculator for compass use based on the latest NGDC geomagnetic field model — DishPointer.com."
Announcements

Submission + - $100 Billiion 'Fix' For Global Warming Discredited (scienceblog.com) 4

slowboy writes: "Science Blog reports that a $100 billion fix for global warming may not work. The discredited 'fix' is the fertilization of potentially millions of tons of iron or other nutrients into the ocean to promote an algae bloom. If this was to work then the algae would start sucking the carbon out of the atmosphere and reduce the effects of a major greenhouse gas. But guess what, that may just not work, regardless of how it would disrupt the ocean's ecosystem. It seems that the carbon may not get pumped into the deeper ocean, it may just lie near the surface and get taken back up into the atmosphere. Fortunately we are finding this out now, and not after $100 billion of you're, mine and others tax money went to the scheme."

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