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The Internet

The Effects of the Cloud On Business, Education 68

g8orade points out two recent articles in The Economist about the rise of cloud computing. The first discusses how software-as-a-service has come to pervade online interactions. "Irving Wladawsky-Berger, a technology visionary at IBM, compares cloud computing to the Cambrian explosion some 500m years ago when the rate of evolution sped up, in part because the cell had been perfected and standardised, allowing evolution to build more complex organisms." The next article examines how the cloud will force a "trade-off between sovereignty and efficiency." Reader pjones contributes news that the Virtual Computer Lab will be supplementing more traditional computer labs at North Carolina State University, and adds, "NCSU's Virtual Computing Lab and IBM are offering the VCL code as a software 'appliance' for use in schools to link to the program. Downloads are available at ibiblio at UNC-Chapel Hill. The VCL also is partnering with Apache.org to make the software available and to allow further community participation in future development."
Idle

One Fish Three Fish Red Fish Pee Fish 2

A Chinese restaurant in Changchun city has received some criticism for keeping ornamental carp in the four meter long urinal in the men's bathroom. A spokesman for the restaurant says the urinal contains a mixture of urine and water which was not harmful to the fish. The owner added that the fish were intended as an attraction for diners and were not used in dishes. I'm surprised this hasn't caught on in more businesses. I know I would enjoy golf a lot more if I could relieve myself into a box of kittens at every hole.
Programming

Submission + - Computer system makes best sports bets (itnews.com.au)

schliz writes: Researchers have created a computer ranking system that consistently predicts US basketball rankings more accurately than polls of sportswriters, coaches, currently used formulas and computer models, and even the tournament seeds themselves.

The new method is said to have proven itself by correctly picking all four of the 2008 finalists for the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball tournament.

Feed The Register: Wikipedia scores $3m donation (theregister.com)

Which is nice

Wikipedia, the people's encylopedia, has trousered a $3m donation from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, to be paid in equal chunks over three years. Which is nice. Even nicer, the money comes from a charitable foundation, and not this from philanthropic venture capitalists who may or may not have commercial designs upon Wikipedia's ads-unsullied pages.


Sun Microsystems

Submission + - Sun takes over MySQL (forbes.com)

ggpauly writes: "Sun announced the acquisition of MySQL for $1 billion. They can have my copy at a fraction of the price. Sun explains the move as "accelerating" their position in enterprise IT and the $15 billion database market. Sun now claims to be the largest commercial open source contributer."
Space

Submission + - Meteor may have hit international space station (yahoo.com)

adnd74 writes: "Two astronauts on the International Space Station will make a spacewalk next week to find out if a micrometeoroid strike damaged a critical part of the outpost's power system, officials said on Thursday. The station is not in any danger and is still producing enough power to support the arrival of a Russian cargo ship this month, said station deputy program manager Kirk Shireman."
Enlightenment

A Review of the $200 Wal-Mart Linux PC 235

bcrowell writes "Wal-Mart's new $200 Linux PC has generated a lot of buzz in geek circles. Although they're sold out of stores, I bought one for my daughter via mail order, and have written up a review of the system. The hardware seems fine for anyone but a hardcore gamer, but the pre-installed gOS flavor of Ubuntu has a lot of rough edges."
Google

Submission + - Is google not keeping a cached copy anymore ?

izzix writes: "Why almost always when you access a google cached page it shows the current version of the page and the sniplet on the search page shows the correct(old) version of the page, Probably that one google crawled. And shows a message like: "These terms only appear in links pointing to this page" Why Is google not keeping anymore this kind of data ? Are they using this wasted space to host another space hungry google services, like gmail, youtube ?"

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