295911
submission
Nitack writes:
The tiny, human-like creature living and using tools in Indonesia just 18,000 years ago really was a distinct species, not just a malformed modern human.
That is the clear implication of a new study of the so-called "hobbit". It states that the creature had wrist bones almost identical to those found in early hominids and modern chimpanzees, and so must have diverged from the human lineage well before the origin of modern humans and Neanderthals.
273245
submission
spring(boing-boing)monkey writes:
Ok so I have an iPhone, I go over to vacation in Canada for a wedding, need to sync up with relatives and stuff, find my way around using maps. What do I pay? 80 cents a minute. I didn't know, what I knew is that Rogers wireless is owned by AT&T. How ridiculous is this? I can call around the globe for 10 cents a minute, but Canada, whoa that is different, especially if you stay on AT&T's network. The customer service asked me first if I was going to leave feedback, very interesting way, maybe then they didn't care to be helpful. I certainly don't expect to add a $130 bill to my weekend vacation in Canada. Ok, this is legally correct, but why does my cellphone have to be so expensive? Does roaming cost that much? Am I supposed to buy a new phone for the weekend? American cell phone companies are way behind global standards and way too expensive and just not convenient. I just hope involvement of new age companies like Apple and Google can change how older firms like Telecoms and Music Labels work.
273223
submission
fava writes:
Last year, Spamhaus found itself on the wrong end of a $11.7 million default judgment awarded to online marketing firm e360insight after it decided not to fight the case due to its belief that US courts had no jurisdiction over the group because of its location in the UK. Yesterday, an appeals court overturned the award, sending the case back down to a lower court.
257893
submission
saintlupus writes:
Time has an interesting article about the failure of the US educational system to properly deal with gifted students. For example, up to ten times as much money is spent nationwide on educating "developmentally disabled" students as gifted ones. Does No Child Left Behind mean that nobody can get ahead, either?
257877
submission
saintlupus writes:
Time has an interesting article about the failure of the US educational system to properly deal with gifted students. For example, up to ten times as much money is spent nationwide on educating "developmentally disabled" students as gifted ones. Does No Child Left Behind mean that nobody can get ahead, either?
256581
submission
konohitowa writes:
Two German scientists claim to have performed an experiment in which microwave photons exceeded the speed of light. From the story: "The pair say they have conducted an experiment in which microwave photons — energetic packets of light — travelled "instantaneously" between a pair of prisms that had been moved up to 3ft apart."
Having seen claims such as these in the past, it will be interesting to see what mistake this particular pair made. And yes, I'm definitely assuming they're misinterpreting their results.