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Power

Submission + - The Coming Uranium Crisis

tcd004 writes: "MIT reports that the world is running out of fuel for our nuclear reactors due to production limitations and an aging infrastructure. Nuclear power has gained popularity as a carbon-free energy source in recent years, but Dr. Thomas Neff, a research affiliate at MIT's Center for International Studies, warned that fuel scarcity could drive up prices and kill the industry before it gets back on its feet. Passport has pulled together some interesting numbers: there are 440 reactors currently in operation and 82 new plants under construction. The demand for fuel has driven the price of uranium up more than 40% in the last few months — 900% over the last decade. You can follow the spot price for a pound of uranium here."
Biotech

Semi-Identical Twins Discovered 224

daftna writes in with a story from Nature about a pair of twins who are neither identical nor fraternal: they are semi-identical. Researchers discovered twins who share all of their mother's DNA but only half of their father's. Both children are chimeras — their cells are not genetically uniform, but include a mix of genes from two separate sperm cells that fertilized a single egg. This is, apparently, not as rare as one might think; but the resulting fetus is rarely viable. This report marks the first known incidence of two half-identical twins resulting from a double fertilization.
Software

Submission + - The best indie games of the year - so far.

Independent Gamer writes: Game Almighty.com has posted a cool story about the latest and greatest independent games. It's a pretty sweet look at some of the games that won awards at the IGF this year. Nowhere near a comprehensive list, but seems like they're going to be posting more stuff like this in the future. Thank god there's finally a big site that pays attention to the under-the-radar indie games. Game Almighty's Indie Games Roundup: Issue One
Media

Submission + - Council of the EU now supports Linux

Daveski_2 writes: An update to the previous story http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/12/31/ 1950225 titled ' Council of the EU Says "We Cannot Support Linux"'

Previously the Council stated on its FAQ that
'The live streaming media service of the Council of the European Union can be viewed on Microsoft Windows and Macintosh platforms. We cannot support Linux in a legal way. So the answer is: No support for Linux.'

Which has now been changed to
'The live streaming media service of the Council of the European Union can be viewed on Microsoft Windows and Macintosh platforms. The open source community can follow the public events in the Council, broadcasted through video streaming on the Internet, via means of an open source player like VLC which is available at no cost on the Internet and which is running on several platforms as e.g. MS WINDOWS as well as several LINUX distributions.'
HP

Submission + - HP Exits Media Center Business, Drops DEC Line

MCE writes: The dominant player in the Media Center business is dropping out. Quietly, HP is ceasing production of its Digital Entertainment Center (DEC), the only real success story for Media Center PCs in a living-room form factor. As the first company to embrace Microsoft's Media Center Edition (MCE), at a time when the platform was still half-baked, HP was simply spent by the time Vista rolled around. Now the company will pour its resources into MediaSmart, a new line of TVs with a digital media adapter (not a Microsoft Media Center Extender) built in. HP insists that its departure is not a statement about the viability of the Media Center platform.

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