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The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Is Setting Up an Offshore IT Help Desk Ethical? 3

theodp writes: 'Except for a few odd jobs,' wrote an advice seeker to The Ethicist (NYT), 'I had been out of work for nine months when I was offered a job setting up an [IT] offshore help desk. Would it be ethical to accept the offer?' Randy Cohen, who pens The Ethicist column for the Times, not only advised the job seeker that it was indeed okay to help co-workers lose their jobs, but also seemed to suggest that it would be unethical for him not to offshore the jobs, saying: 'Some people feel we have a greater ethical duty to those closest to us — our neighbors — but in an era of global trade and travel, that is a recipe for tribalism and its attendant ills.' The job seeker, who noted his father's auto-industry job was outsourced, chose to ignore Cohen's ethics advice — as well as his own wife's — and declined the job out of principle. He continues to seek work. Comments?
Graphics

Submission + - The sands of time - simulated (i-programmer.info)

mikejuk writes: A new simulation method makes sand flow realistically for a small fraction of the computational cost of more direct methods. The idea is based on the well known approach of simulating the flow as a fluid but in this case the equations used include more realistic terms to model the way particles interact with each other and with solid objects. The results are impressive.

Comment Re:Giant goliath convector heater of sorts (Score 1) 201

If we had unlimited power all the other problems are probably solvable through application of more power (for noise reduction, for instance, some sort of active noise-cancelling system, like a giant pair of Bose headphones). It would be a pain in the ass to maintain, and it would probably cause nasty environmental problems in the colder parts of the world (barring further application of our hypothetical unlimited power source).

Comment Re:Yay legal babble (Score 1) 68

I think they mean "supply" as in upload or originate, which they clearly didn't do in this case. They do supply some of their own content in the form of stuff like YouTube Live or various partnered offerings, but they're not directly responsible what users upload, which is most of the content on the site.
Security

The Nuclear Bunker Where Wikileaks Will Be Located 187

An anonymous reader writes "Engadget has photos of 'Pionen White Mountains, the nuclear bunker in which Wikileaks will locate some of its servers. It was excavated 98 feet underground, in a rock hill in the center of Stockholm, Sweden, during the Cold War.' It looks like they hired the same interior designer who decorated Batman's lair."
Bug

Submission + - Youtube HTML Injection Vulnerability Exploited (google.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Youtube is currently open to an html attack based on using two [style] elements in a row — Youtube currently escapes one such element correctly but two works. It seems to be used currently for font-size adjustment, marquee text etc. but it breaks the comment system so new comments can't be made and the comment breaking the system can't be deleted, and cuts off the page at the breaking comment. An example video, previously featured on Slashdot: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSgiXGELjbc&feature=related

Comment Re:Gimme a break (Score 1) 183

Support for flash is available under Android 2.2, as is running apps from external storage. External storage has always been accessible for media, caching, etc. It would be pretty hard to find a modern phone chipset out there that doesn't support 3D acceleration of some sort, particularly on something as high end as a 2GHz chip. Can't comment on the document editing - there's definitely apps out there for it, but I'd rather work with something closer to a full-sized keyboard.
Firefox

Firefox Search In Ubuntu 10.04 Changed To Google 224

kai_hiwatari writes "Sometime back Canonical decided to change the default search in Firefox that comes Ubuntu 10.04 to Yahoo! from Google. In a surprising turn-around, Canonical have decided to a ditch Yahoo! for Google. Rick Spencer from Canonical announced that Google will now be the default Firefox search in Ubuntu 10.04, not Yahoo! as was previously decided."

Submission + - Artic Ice Satellite Data mis-interpeted (www.cbc.ca)

lonecrow writes: Canadian Scientist David Barber travels to the arctic to confirm satellite readings of multi-year sea ice. He finds that what looks like multi-year sea ice from the satellites is actually more like re-frozen slush. Their finding indicate that Arctic sea ice is disappearing faster than scientists expected and faster then it appears from the satellite data . "It's happening much faster than our most pessimistic projections".

There is also short radio interview on a CBC national science show.

Submission + - Large Scale PS3 firmware failure.

An anonymous reader writes: From http://twitter.com/SonyPlayStation

SonyPlayStation

      1. We're aware that many of you are having problems connecting to PSN, and yes, we're looking into it. Stay tuned for updates.

Feb. 28th 2010 a unknown number of pre 'slim' generation PS3s suffered a 8001050F error and reset their clocks to 12/31/1999. Even PS3 that were not on the network recently suffered this error.
Games with Downloaded Content or using the trophy system were unable to play.

Disabling the internet in the PS3 menu then changing the date manually before loading any games that used DLC or Trophies seemed to avoid this problem.

Comment Re:Either I'm retarded (given) or this makes no se (Score 5, Insightful) 180

Basically, it sounds like there's two things here. Blocking P2P software that interferes with other P2P software in a malware-esque fashion, and enforcing clear notifications that shared files are, well, shared. Seems dumb, but a lot of folks out there don't realize that if they share "My Documents," everything from their tax records to their secret porn stash is going to be on the web for all and sundry to download. This hits home particularly hard for gov't employees, considering some of the sensitive stuff that's leaked through LimeWire and the like over the years.

Comment Re:No surprise there.... (Score 2, Insightful) 98

Just wanted to note that Microsoft does actually have a 'Microsoft Update' system that will update other Microsoft products (Office, Visual Studio, etc) installed on the system. I don't think it's available for pre-Vista systems, and it's a far cry from apt-get and the like, but it's a step in the right direction.

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