Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Microsoft

Submission + - INCITS confirms: U.S. to vote for Open XML in ISO (computerworld.com)

willdavid writes: "Eric Lai (ComputerWorld): The United States member group to the ISO standards body on Wednesday finalized plans to vote in favor of approving Microsoft Corp.'s Office Open XML document format as an open standard. The executive board of the Washington D.C.-based InterNational Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS) had its final meeting on Wednesday morning before its Sept. 2 vote is due at the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?com mand=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9033721&intsrc=new s_ts_head"
GNOME

Submission + - GNOME Beats KDE in Annual Desktop Linux Poll 1

An anonymous reader writes: GNOME has taken over the leadership position from KDE, in the battle for Linux desktop mindshare, according a just completed annual survey of desktop Linux users. This year marks the first time that GNOME has beaten out KDE in desktop Linux user popularity (with 45 percent vs. 35 percent usage), a result attributed by the survey's analysis to the enormous popularity of GNOME-based Ubuntu (30 percent usage). I'm curious how slashdotters feel about the advantages/disadvantages of GNOME vs. KDE? Which is better, and why?
Sun Microsystems

Submission + - Sun Enters the Commodity Silicon Business (sun.com)

Samrobb writes: According to Sun Microsystems CEO Jonathan Schwartz, Sun has decided to release its UltraSPARC T2 processor under the GPL. According to Schwartz, "We're announcing the fastest microprocessor we've ever shipped this week — delivering 89.6 Ghz of parallel computing power on a single chip — running standard Java applications and open source OS's. Simultaneously, we've said we're entering the commodity marketplace, and opening the chip up to our competition... To add fuel to the fire, the blueprints for our UltraSPARC T2... the core design files and test suites, will be available to the open source community, via its most popular license: the GPL."
Communications

Submission + - First Survey of iPhone Owners (pcworld.com)

Ealbro writes: "I thought you might be interested in this story launching at PC World this morning. We surveyed 500 iPhone owners about their new toy and got some pretty interesting results. Nine out of 10 were very happy with their iPhone, but a pretty substantial 13 percent reported having at least one significant problem (about a third said the problem was related to the battery). And despite their overall satisfaction, they had lots of gripes and suggestions — speed up the network, add voice dialing, allow for copy and paste and build some native games so they don't have to connect to the web to have some fun, among others. It's the first substantial survey I've seen of iPhone owners."
Biotech

Submission + - Does Caffeine Perk Up Memory? (sciam.com)

Raver32 writes: "Trying to cut down on your coffee consumption, ladies? Well if you're of a certain age, you might want to reconsider. A new study from France found that women — especially those 65 and over — who reported drinking three-plus cups of java daily did better on memory tests than compeers who drank one or fewer cups a day. "Caffeine is a psychostimulant which appears to reduce cognitive decline in women," study author Karen Ritchie of INSERM, the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research in Montpellier, France, said in a statement."
Robotics

Submission + - Team to Use PS3,YDL in DARPA Urban Challenge

fistfullast33l writes: "While the PS3's Linux distribution has taken some hits for running inside a hypervisor that limits access to some hardware, the Axion Racing team has announced they will be using a PS3 running Yellow Dog Linux in their entry for the DARPA Urban Challenge in November 2007. "We felt having cars drive themselves was getting a little too easy, so we threw the Sony PlayStation into our bag of tricks," joked Bill Kehaly, Axion Racing's team leader. The PS3 will be in charge of examining information from an RGB road finding camera, and will be utilizing the Cell processor's multithreading capabilities to do so."
Music

Submission + - Record Industry Woes Aggravated by Years of Bad PR

An anonymous reader writes: Richard Menta makes a strong case on MP3 Newswire that bad public relations stirred by the open conflict between the record industry and the consumer is a heavy contributor to the crumbling fortunes of the major labels. In his analysis he contrasts how the NFL and Major League baseball tread gingerly with the Michael Vick and steroids scandals respectively to avoid further raising the ire of sports fans, while the major labels and the RIAA openly antagonize music fans who dare embrace new technologies they don't have full control of. From the article" Today the major record labels don't have a positive brand image and the very public actions they have taken to control the rise of digital media and the Internet over the last several years is at the very heart of their fall from grace. To some the big labels are an anachronism. To others they are anti-consumer. The erosion of their image is dramatic..." Menta then lays out 17 public events that have chipped away at the image of the recording industry including those that show them as bullies (RIAA sues little girls), as incompetent (RIAA sues the dead), as oppressors of the artist (Courtney Love, Janis Ian, and Grey Tuesday), as greedy (that's what Steve Jobs called them), and as practitioners of unauthorized access (Sony rootkit scandal). Consumer perception can be a bitch and the end result here is that many consumers probably don't feel as good about buying a CD anymore.
Supercomputing

Submission + - NASA to build largest Supercomputer ever (linuxworld.com.au) 1

Onlyodin writes: The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has given the green light to a project that will build the largest ever supercomputer based on Silicon Graphics' (SGI) 512-processor Altix computers.

Called Project Columbia and costing around $160-million, the 10,240-processor system will be used by researchers at the Advanced Supercomputing Facility at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California.

What makes Project Columbia unique is the size of the multiprocessor Linux systems, or nodes, that it clusters together. It is common for supercomputers to be built of thousands of two-processor nodes, but the Ames system uses SGI's NUMAlink switching technology and ProPack Linux operating system enhancements to connect 512-processor nodes, each of which will have more than 1,000G bytes of memory.

Full Story at Linuxworld

Biotech

Submission + - Chernobyl Mushrooms Feeding on Radiation

cowtamer writes: According to a National Geographic Article certain fungi can use ionizing radiation to perform "radiosynthesis" using the pigment melanin (the same one in our skin that protects us from UV radiation). It is speculated that this might be useful on long space voyages where energy from the Sun is not readily available.
Software

Submission + - Apple Uses Windows Mobile In Its Stores!!! (pocketpcmag.com)

wwejason writes: Steve Green of "Smartphone & Pocket PC Magazine" says that when he went to an Apple store recently, he noticed Apple "customer service reps were using handheld devices that could process your order on the spot without having to wait in line at the main counter. The unit fits neatly in their hand; it takes credit cards and debit cards with a built in card reader and can even initiate an electronic copy of your receipt to be sent to your email address so you don't have to wait for a printed one."

No it's not some sort of souped up iPhone, it's running Windows Mobile! That's right Apple fanboys, Apple runs Windows. Apple, PWNED by Micro$oft

Sun Microsystems

Submission + - Sun profitable for third consecutive quarter

doxology writes: The New York Times reports that Sun Microsystems has posted a profit for three consecutive quarters after five quarters of losses. While product revenue declined by one percent, revenue from services increased by three percent. Is Sun's open-source-everything-we-own strategy working?
First Person Shooters (Games)

Submission + - UT3 on Linux or Mac Anyone?

Space-Nut writes: It is well known that the Unreal Tournament series have tried hard in the past to make their games available for Linux and Macs. With the upcoming Unreal Tournament 3 release sometime soon and a statement back in May from Mark Rein in thread about DX10"..All this means is that UT3 will support DX10 — it does NOT mean that DX10 is required! We expect the vast majority of our users will be Windows XP / DX9 users. We will also support Mac and Linux as per usual." Is anyone else really excited about UT3 and 2007 and will you support Epic in providing a Linux and Mac version by buying the game?
Music

Submission + - Who owns the rights to a cover song? (pitchforkmedia.com) 1

doroshjt writes: "The Musician M. Ward has a great song which is cover of Daniel Johnston's 'I Go Home' which is now being covered on a Mastercard commercial. Who owns the rights to a cover?

Though it's hardly a declaration of war, a recent post on M. Ward's MySpace blog points to the possibility of a Waits-ian battle brewing between the Merge songwriter and MasterCard over an advertisement. You've probably seen the ad: it's the one with the baseball fans from all walks of life, and it's for some sort of contest to win a week with your favorite team. It also features a suspiciously familiar song on its soundtrack...

According to the post, "MasterCard was denied permission by M. Ward to use his version of Daniel Johnston's 'To Go Home' [from Ward's recent EP of the same name and Post-War LP] — so MasterCard found some anonymous musicians to re-record the song. Neither M. Ward nor the musicians that appeared on his version have any involvement in this recording or the commercial."

We're not sure of the legality of a company using an inexact replica of a cover (judge all this for yourself by checking out the ad below). And if it came to a lawsuit — not that any legal action is mentioned — are the rights Ward's in this case or Johnston's? Nonetheless, it seems like a shady deal on MasterCard's part: Calling for permission to use a song in a commercial: 10 cents. Being rejected: free. Getting session musicians to cut a version of the song you can use anyway: priceless.
"

Slashdot Top Deals

The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh

Working...