Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Useful feature gone. (Score 1) 446

With the new privacy controls added in, it seems a feature that would have now been useful for this change is now gone. and thats the ability to view your Wall as one of your friends. Since you can now restrict posts to groups, it would be nice to have this feature to see what all information each group is seeing. You still have the ability to view your information as one of your friends, but they removed the wall tab.
Games

Submission + - Here there be Dragons... (arstechnica.com)

babboo65 writes: Dungeons and Dragons Online is enjoying a second life in terms of player count and buzz, all thanks to a new business strategy: giving the game away. Turbine is making their MMO as accessible as possible, and that includes making players who don't pay anything as happy as possible. Subscriptions are up 40 percent. Ars explores how free can be very profitable.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft contractors to be out in the cold by Chr

celeb8 writes: "Microsoft datacenter services negotiations lately concluded, with Siemens and HP taking the majority of the support contracts. VMC/Volt has lost most of their contracts, but they recently admitted (after a long period of refusing to disclose any of this to their people) that despite not having the jobs, they will be enforcing the non-compete clauses that most of their workers labor under. This means that although Volt/VMC has requested that their employees stay loyal to the end in a recent e-mail, they won't be signing the non-compete agreements so that other potential employers will feel free to hire them. How would you deal with this situation? Is there a way out besides being unemployed for the 6 months to a year it takes for these to expire? Whatever else you take away from this, its important that others know what to expect from Volt/VMC as a future employer. Don't make the mistake we did."
Debian

Debian Elevates KFreeBSD Port to First-Class Status 376

Reader tail.man points out this press release from Debian which says that the port of the Debian system to the FreeBSD kernel will be given equal footing alongside Debian's several other release ports, starting with the release of Squeeze. Excerpting from this release: "The kFreeBSD architectures for the AMD64/Intel EM64T and i386 processor architectures are now release architectures. Severe bugs on these architectures will be considered release critical the same way as bugs on other architectures like armel or i386 are. If a particular package does not build or work properly on such an architecture this problem is considered release-critical. Debian's main motivation for the inclusion of the FreeBSD kernel into the official release process is the opportunity to offer to its users a broader choice of kernels and also include a kernel that provides features such as jails, the OpenBSD Packet Filter and support for NDIS drivers in the mainline kernel with full support."
Science

Oldest Skeleton In New World Discovered 485

Death Metal Maniac writes "Dubbed Eva de Naharon, or Eve of Naharon, the female skeleton has been dated at 13,600 years old. If that age is accurate, the skeleton along with three others found in underwater caves along the Caribbean coast of the Yucatán Peninsula could provide new clues to how the Americas were first populated. The skeletons' skulls hint that the people may not be of northern Asian descent, which would contradict the dominant theory of New World settlement. 'The shape of the skulls has led us to believe that Eva and the others have more of an affinity with people from South Asia than North Asia,' González explained."
Programming

Theo de Raadt On Relicensing BSD Code 613

iBSD writes "KernelTrap has an interesting article in which Theo de Raadt discusses the legal implications of the recent relicensing of OpenBSD's BSD-licensed Atheros driver under the GPL. De Raadt says, 'it has been like pulling teeth since (most) Linux wireless guys and the SFLC do not wish to admit fault. I think that the Linux wireless guys should really think hard about this problem, how they look, and the legal risks they place upon the future of their source code bodies.' He stressed that the theory that BSD code can simply be relicensed to the GPL without making significant changes to the code is false, adding, 'in their zeal to get the code under their own license, some of these Linux wireless developers have broken copyright law repeatedly. But to even get to the point where they broke copyright law, they had to bypass a whole series of ethical considerations too.'"

Slashdot Top Deals

HELP!!!! I'm being held prisoner in /usr/games/lib!

Working...