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Comment Re:Tit for tat (Score 1) 197

CRT Televisions are processed at very few places in North America (last time I researched it Noranda Mines was doing it in Quebec Canada. CRT Displays contain high amounts of Beryllium by weight. You must be careful with beryllium-containing dusts; inhalation while surely cause you severe illness. Beryllium is corrosive to tissue, and can cause a chronic life-threatening allergic disease called berylliosis in some people. As it is not synthesized in stars, beryllium is a relatively rare element in both the Earth and the universe. The element is not known to be necessary or useful for either plant or animal life.

Comment Re:Tit for tat (Score 1) 197

Indium is a major component in the screens (were running out of it too! ) It's produced by letting nickel react with air and water and the sludge that results is the good stuff. Indium is chemically similar to gallium and thallium, both of which you do not want in your body. so MrQuacker your on the right track. There is a reason there is are very few North American E-Waste processors. The good stuff is is hard to get at without generating smelters penalties for the bad stuff.
PlayStation (Games)

PS3 Jailbreak Now Legal In Spain 113

deek writes "Spanish gamer site NicaGamerz.com have reported that it's now legal to sell the PS3 Jailbreak modchip in Spain (Google translation of Spanish original). According to the article, one reason for the legal ruling is because Sony removed the ability to run GNU/Linux on the console. One can only wonder if Sony will soon rush out a firmware update that will re-enable the OtherOS feature, and appeal the court decision. Oh the irony of that thought. The legal ruling was made on the 13th December (Google translation). There are only 5 days to appeal, starting from that date."

Comment Re:Not without precedent... (Score 1) 338

It's not any different the MAFIAA just hasn't got around to squashing that bug yet. Actually the investment for a Thinkpad with 6TB of external storage space and an HDMI port was the best investment for my living room in a long time. It attaches to a 58 Samsung Plasma which has embedded media player software which I've used but it's not a fast as just piping the video/audio via hdmi to the screen. Takes a bit of work having to get up and press a button on the laptop once and awhile but then again I'm feeling more like a Cylon more and more each day (24/7/365 Connections) I really wonder where the entire industry is going. What Collage kid can afford $100/Mth for Cable/Sat TV (there not watching public broadcasting and HBO, TSN et al. do not come cheap) So whats a person to do but steal the content available online if they want to remain

Comment Re:Eheh (Score 1) 407

Why is Lotus Notes worse then Exchange. Lotus Domino Server with all the bells and whistles is probably equally or more expensive than MS Exchange but it works and works well out of the box (as much as a Groupware platform can work out the box) for most people. Also Lotus Domino Server and Client is multi-platform and will work under linux. I've got experience in sysoping nodes in a 52 Site 8000 + User Lotus system with PKI and was quite happy with the directory features.

Comment Re:What about patches? (Score 1) 282

5 GB is hardly enough for me, I average 3.87GB TX and 8.43GB RX Daily. That said with crazy mandates such as this it will only spur further innovation. Like finding away to bridge a highspeed connection over the PSTN using our free long distance packaged with everyones home phone. Perhaps everyone should use there dial up connections and give them good old portmasters a job. We might even cause Bell to eat some costs; instead of causing us grief by pricing newer services out of general use e.g Netflicks, iTunes, Skype for that matter. I guess they figure they can get away with it since people happily pay those obscene prices for mobile internet.
AMD

AMD Demos Llano Fusion APU, Radeon 6800 Series 116

MojoKid writes "At a press event for the impending launch of AMD's new Radeon HD 6870 and HD 6850 series graphics cards, the company took the opportunity to provide an early look at the first, fully functional samples of their upcoming 'Llano' processor, or APU (Applications Processer Unit). For those unfamiliar with Llano, it's 32nm 'Fusion' product that integrates CPU, GPU, and Northbridge functions on a single die. The chip is a low-power derivative of the company's current Phenom II architecture fused with a GPU that will target a wide range of operating environments at speeds of 3GHz or higher. Test systems showed the integrated GPU had no trouble running Alien vs. Predator at a moderate resolution with DirectX 11 features enabled. In terms of the Radeon 6800 series, board shots have been unveiled today, as well as scenes from AMD's upcoming tech demo, Mecha Warrior, showcasing the new graphics technology and advanced effects from the open source Bullet Physics library."

Comment Someone Smokes Too much Crack (Score 1) 1348

Never ceases to amaze me how often articles come to press claiming * Linux is dead. Being desktop linux, HPC linux, Virtualized Linux, embedded linux or webserver linux. Linux is not dead however you visualize linux; is it a distribution a kernel, a building block, another component etc. It's and amazing tool and until the LKML goes offline Linux will exist and people will use it on there desktops etc. I for one think the desktop is dead not linux, I for one use X-Windows, VNC, ssh, and MS Terminal Services to accomplish both work and personal tasks all day long. Most of the time now I'm using some sorta QNX Flavour/Hybrid on my Blackberry to access my machines and my clients machines. At least I'm pretty sure the blackberry is using some sorta embedded Qnx realtime os.

Science

Morphing Metals 121

aarondubrow writes "Imagine a metal that 'remembers' its original, cold-forged shape, and can return to that shape when exposed to heat or a magnetic pulse. Like magic out of a Harry Potter novel, such a metal could contract on command, or swing back and forth like a pendulum. Believe it or not, such metals already exist. First discovered in 1931, they belong to a class of materials called 'shape memory alloys (SMA),' whose unique atomic make-up allows them to return to their initial form, or alternate between forms through a phase change."
Software

Court Says First Sale Doctrine Doesn't Apply To Licensed Software 758

An anonymous reader wrote to tell us a federal appeals court ruled today that the first sale doctrine is "unavailable to those who are only licensed to use their copies of copyrighted works." This reverses a 2008 decision from the Autodesk case, in which a man was selling used copies of AutoCAD that were not currently installed on any computers. Autodesk objected to the sales because their license agreement did not permit the transfer of ownership. Today's ruling (PDF) upholds Autodesk's claims: "We hold today that a software user is a licensee rather than an owner of a copy where the copyright owner (1) specifies that the user is granted a license; (2) significantly restricts the user’s ability to transfer the software; and (3) imposes notable use restrictions. Applying our holding to Autodesk’s [software license agreement], we conclude that CTA was a licensee rather than an owner of copies of Release 14 and thus was not entitled to invoke the first sale doctrine or the essential step defense. "

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