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Comment Re:In metric (for the rest of the world) (Score 1) 992

85mph = ~136.8km/h (motorways in Italy, among other countries, have speed limits of 130km/h)

although, however, "Legal provisions allow operators to set the limit to 150 km/h (93 mph) on their concessions on a voluntary basis if these conditions are met: three lanes in each direction and a working SICVE, or Safety Tutor, speed-camera system." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autostrade_of_Italy

Comment Moon infrastructure (Score 1) 214

Do you think there will really be separate buildings like that on the moon, rather than indoor interconnected complexes?

Would save a lot of decompression chambers, etc. Or why not make a tube system for transportation of goods (and internet packets) while you are at it!

Linux

Submission + - State of Blu Ray on Linux

An anonymous reader writes: What's the state of Blu Ray on Linux? Assuming I've got reasonably modern hardware, can I buy any USB or SATA Blu Ray player, pop in any legally purchased Blu Ray disk and just watch the content? Or is it a case of selective support, or worse, no reliable support at all?
United Kingdom

Submission + - UK ID Cards Are No More! (pirateparty.org.uk) 1

Ajehals writes: "In the last ten years, governments have fallen over themselves to try and obtain more information about their citizens. Sometimes it's databases, or new regulations, or cameras, but the one thing they have in common is that they can be used to identify you, and track you. Today is a positive step then, as in the UK, it's the last day for the "UK Identity Card" — after midnight GMT tonight, they will no longer be valid for use at all."

Submission + - Went after 2 bloggers, took 7000 accounts (www.nrk.no)

xiando writes: Norwegian police were asked by the police in Italy to get personal information about two bloggers who were using a server in Oslo. The police decided the best thing to do would be to take the servers harddrive along with personal information about 7000 other users. Other ISPs say this is common operating procedure in Norway these days.
Apple

Submission + - Apple still sanctimonious: no Playboy app for iPad (infoworld.com)

tsamsoniw writes: The rumors that a Playboy app would appear in the Apple App Store were greatly exaggerated. Playboy plans to offer an online service through which subscribers can access past and current issues of the nudie mag — and per Playboy, it will be accessible via Safari and support iPad features (whatever that means). But if Playboy does come out with a native app for iPad, but all the nudity will be censored. That should be just fine for the legions of people who indeed read the magazine for the articles. This really shouldn't be a surprise, though: If Apple insists on "protecting" users of its high-priced gear from pixilated naughty bits in a graphic-novel version of classic literature, it certainly won't let users access the full monty. It's a shame, though: If Apple's customers want access to that sort of content, Apple should allow them to get at if via a native app instead of suffering a potentially buggier, less secure browser-based experience.
Security

Submission + - Compromised .giv, .mil, .edu sites for sale (krebsonsecurity.com) 1

Khopesh writes: Imperva blogged today about the sale of compromised .gov, .mil, and .edu sites, illustrating that cyber-criminals are getting bolder. Krebs on Security has an unredacted view of the site list. Perhaps the biggest threat is yet to come; if an industrious criminal can break into top government and military sites, so too can government-backed teams, proving that GhostNet and Stuxnet are just the beginning...

Comment Re:Wow (Score 2, Funny) 167

Censorship

US Military 'Banned' From Viewing Wikileaks 390

Following up on its risible demand that Wikileaks return the Afghanistan documents, the Pentagon has banned military members from viewing the documents. The Washington Times obtained copies of Navy and Marine Corps messages to their troops saying that accessing the documents even from a personal computer is "willingly committing a security violation." Wired notes that terrorists everywhere are under no such restriction. Reader carp3_noct3m writes "I am personally left almost speechless at this disconnect from reality demonstrated by the military. I am a USMC Iraq war vet, and find these policies completely ridiculous. They show the inability of our supposedly technologically knowledgeable military to fuse this knowledge with policy, mostly due to the political pressure that has erupted to 'take care of' the Wikileaks problem."

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