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NASA

Submission + - NASA astronaut 'checks in' on Foursquare from spac (thehill.com)

GovTechGuy writes: NASA astronaut and International Space Station Commander Doug Wheelock became the first person to "check in" on Foursquare from space on Friday when he registered his location at the International Space Station.
Science

Submission + - The World's Cheapest Hydrogen Production Process (gizmag.com)

ElectricSteve writes: FUKAI Environmental Research Institute has announced a new technology for obtaining hydrogen that it claims is less expensive and more efficient than anything that's been tried so far. FUKAI's process involves adding aluminum or magnesium to boiling "oefunctional water," a proprietary substance that can be produced simply by running regular tap water through a natural mineral-containing "functional water generation unit." The bonds that join hydrogen and oxygen molecules in regular water, which ordinarily require some energy to break, are weakened in functional water. The liquid yields 2 liters (122 cubic inches) of hydrogen gas per gram of aluminum, or 3.3 liters (201 cubic inches) per gram of magnesium. FUKAI claims that the cost of producing enough hydrogen to generate 1kWh of electricity is about 18 cents US. That cost could be lowered through the use of recycled aluminum.
Science

Submission + - Moving Monopoles Caught on Camera (sciencedaily.com)

Thorfinn.au writes: Science Daily is reporting on magnetic monopoles.
For decades, researchers have been searching for magnetic monopoles — isolated magnetic charges, which can move around freely in the same way as electrical charges. Magnetic poles normally only occur in pairs. Now a team of researchers at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) in Switzerland and University College Dublin has managed to create monopoles in the form of quasiparticles in an assembly of nanoscale magnets and to observe how they move using a microscope at the Swiss Light Source (SLS) to make the magnetic structures visible.
As with the elementary monopoles, which were first predicted by the British physicist Paul Dirac in 1931, each monopole is connected by a "string" to a monopole of opposite charge. The two monopoles can nevertheless move independently of each other. These results are not only of scientific interest, but could also provide a basis for the development of future electronic devices. The results are published online in the journal Nature Physics (Oct. 17, 2010).

Science

Submission + - No Standard for the Placebo (sciencedaily.com)

drmattnd writes: "Research calls calls into question this foundation upon which much of medicine rests, by showing that there is no standard behind the standard — no standard for the placebo."

Submission + - Blizzard Suing Creators Of StarCraft II Hacks (rockpapershotgun.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Blizzard have taken the extremely peculiar decision to ban players from playing StarCraft II for using cheats in the single-player game. This meant that, despite cheating no one but themselves, they were locked out of playing the single-player game. Which is clearly bonkers. But it’s not enough for the developer. Blizzard’s lawyers are now setting out to sue those who create cheats.

Gamespot reports that the megolithic company is chasing after three developers of hacks for “destroying” their online game. It definitely will be in violation of the end user agreement, so there’s a case. However, it’s a certain element of their claim that stands out for attention. They’re claiming using the hacks causes people to infringe copyright:

        “When users of the Hacks download, install, and use the Hacks, they copy StarCraft II copyrighted content into their computer’s RAM in excess of the scope of their limited license, as set forth in the EULA and ToU, and create derivative works of StarCraft II.”

Submission + - Treating cancer with light

An anonymous reader writes: Can skin cancer be treated with light? Scientists at the University of California, Irvine (UC Irvine), believe so. They're exploring new ways to image cancerous lesions using LEDs that might advance a technique for treating cancer called photodynamic therapy (PDT). In PDT, photosensitizing chemicals that absorb light are injected into a tumor, which is then exposed to light. The chemicals generate oxygen radicals from the light energy, destroying the cancer cells. PDT is currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of esophageal and lung cancer.

Submission + - U.N. climate panel agrees to reforms (ecoseed.org)

renewableenergywade writes: SINGAPORE/OSLO, October 14 (Reuters) — The United Nation panel of climate scientists agreed on Thursday to change its practices in response to errors in a 2007 report, and its chairman, Rajendra Pachauri of India, dismissed suggestions he should step down.

At an October 11 to October 14 meeting in Busan, South Korea, the 130-nation panel agreed to tighten fact-checking in reports that help guide the world's climate and energy policies and to set up a "task force" to decide on wider reforms by mid-2011.

"Change and improvement are vital to the I.P.C.C.," Mr. Pachauri told a telephone news conference by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former United States vice president Al Gore.

Security

Submission + - 4chan finds Linux kernel flaw for attacks (zdnet.com.au) 3

mask.of.sanity writes: Online activists have said that they have unearthed a zero-day Linux Kernel vulnerability which they intend on using in pending attacks against anti-pirate organisations. One activist said that the exploit had been discovered by Goatse Security member Weev and provides hackers with root administration access to Linux servers.

The new kernel vulnerability has already been used to hack and deface the website of the ACAPOR, a Portuguese anti-piracy agency that had become a target of the group's Operation Payback campaign in which the group had launched coordinated Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks against several copyright enforcement agencies.

KISS frontman Gene Simmons is the latest victim to have his website attacked by a DDoS attack under the Operation Payback campaign, following his statements at a media event that users who infringe copyright should be sued.

Comment Re:transferring Window license? (Score 3, Interesting) 606

AFAIK, if you get with MS and get with their licensing program, you have to buy an MS OS for every computer you install, and the OS agreement with MS says you can upgrade (or downgrade) it whenever you want. You still have to buy the OS from your PC manufacturer. That way when MS come out with Win7, you don't have to buy new licenses for everyone, all you have to do is buy a MS OS. I've recently researched this for my company, and if you're buying individual MS Office licenses (or windows cals + exchange cals + sharepoint cals), you're crazy. Get with MS, they have a yearly agreement you make with them. Once a year, you count how many employees you have, you write MS a big check, and you're done with it. You could hire 1000 new employees, and you can install whatever you want, no charge. They could work for 3 months, you could fire them, and you don't pay for them. Only after the 1 year agreement is over, you have to sign a new contract, and pay the fees again. It's cheaper and easier to maintain then keeping track of them one at a time. You also get free upgrades whenever a new version comes out, so it's simple on that front. It also has some accounting advantages (Is a one-year license a capital expense? Will you save money by it not being a capital expense? Consult your local accounting department/tax advisor, you might save 20% or so. It's also fewer things for accounting to keep track of.) http://www.microsoft.com/licensing/contact-us.aspx United States Call (800) 426-9400 M-F, 6 AM - 5:30 PM Pacific, or find an authorized reseller. Canada Call the Microsoft Resource Centre at (877) 568-2495 YEESH. I sound like a MS guy. I promise I'm not.

Comment Re:Proper prior planning prevents poor performance (Score 1) 162

My guess is that the issues are more about the software requiring bug-specific behaviors. I had an opportunity to speak with one of the OS people a long time ago, they said that "Long Ago" Lotus 1-2-3 had a nasty habit of writing to files after Lotus told the OS to close the file handle. In the older versions of the OS, the OS didn't check to see if you were writing to a closed file handle, and wrote to the closed file. Then you update to the latest version of DOS, and all the sudden it breaks Lotus because now the OS cleans up after itself and correctly returns an error when you try writing to the closed file handle (which is probably ignored by Lotus, causing the save file to be corrupted somehow). Now who do you blame? MS for not getting the API right in the first place, or Lotus 1-2-3 for writing to the closed file handle, or MS fixing a bug? From what I remember, MS ended up adding code to detect that the application was Lotus and switching into a quirks kind of mode. Having to write fixes for all these crappy applications is why Windows is a POS. More towards the issues with drivers. A friend of mine's printer driver broke with XP SP2. We found out that how the printer driver worked was it has a service that hosted an application that spoke to the printer, and the driver spoke to the local application via TCP. MS firewall blocked it (cause open ports can expose vulnerabilities). I blame the printer company for writing a crappy 50meg printer driver that requires a network connection to print locally, not MS.

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