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

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Almighty Buck

Amazon Erases Orders To Cover Up Pricing Mistake 338

The Knife writes "Amazon secretly canceled orders for a large jazz CD set after realizing that it had mis-priced the item at $31 instead of its MSRP of $499. At first, inventory shortages caused the online merchant to string customers along for over a month after they placed their orders. But when Amazon realized that the box set was under-priced by $470, it simply erased all records of customers' order in their account history. No emails were sent to customers informing them of the price change or of the order cancellation. Probably because it violates Amazon's highly publicized price guarantee policy. A customer who called to complain and request the CD set at the $31 price was given a $20 discount off of his next Amazon order." A caveat: there is no external confirmation that Amazon did what is claimed here.
Operating Systems

Should IBM's SOM/DSOM Be Open Sourced? 157

Esther Schindler sends a note about two journalists for very different publications (herself one of them) urging IBM to open-source, not all of OS/2 — they've consistently refused to do that — but instead one of its most powerful features: SOM, the System Object Model. Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols writes at desktoplinux.com, "IBM, I'm told by developers who should know, still has all of SOM's source code and it all belongs to IBM. It's because IBM doesn't have all the code for OS/2 and some of it belongs to Microsoft that IBM open-sourcing OS/2 has proven to be a futile hope." And Esther Schindler takes the developer angle in a blog post at CIO.com: "Could the open-source community use a library packaging technology that enables languages to share class libraries regardless of the language an application was written in? I dare say it could, especially since the code to accomplish that goal was written (and shelved) more than ten years ago. All it takes to make that code available is to ask IBM to release SOM and DSOM as open-source." What are the business issues that would convince IBM to assent?
Earth

Biofuels Make Greenhouse Gases Worse 506

vortex2.71 sends us to the Seattle Times for an account of two studies published in the prestigious journal Science pointing to the conclusion that almost all biofuels used today cause more greenhouse-gas emissions than conventional fuels if the full emissions costs of producing these "green" fuels are taken into account. "The benefits of biofuels have come under increasing attack in recent months, as scientists took a closer look at the global environmental cost of their production. These plant-based fuels were originally billed as better than fossil fuels because the carbon released when they were burned was balanced by the carbon absorbed when the plants grew. But that equation proved overly simplistic because the process of turning plants into fuels causes its own emissions — for refining and transport, for example. These studies... for the first time take a detailed, comprehensive look at the emissions effects of the huge amount of natural land that is being converted to cropland globally to support biofuels development."
Security

Serious Vulnerability In Firefox 2.0.0.12 355

Oh, Not Now writes "Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.12, mere hours old, is vulnerable by default to a directory traversal trick, via the view-source mechanism. Although mitigated by the NoScript plug-in, this is quite a serious bug — the default installation is vulnerable from the get-go."
Yahoo!

Yahoo To Reject Microsoft Bid 302

Many outlets are echoing a subscribers-only report in the Wall Street Journal that Yahoo's board has decided to reject Microsoft's takeover offer. The NYTimes offers the only other independent reporting so far confirming this claim. The report says that Yahoo will formally reject the offer in a letter on Monday, since they believe it "massively undervalues" the company. Microsoft offered $31 per share, a 62% premium on the stock price at the time, for Yahoo; but the latter believes that no offer below $40 per share is tenable. The AP has some background on Yahoo's options in responding to the bid.
United States

Submission + - Dollar vs EURO -- Weapons of mass destruction (thinkandask.com)

Think & Ask writes: The United States dollar abandoned gold markets under the Nixon administration in 1973. The US media didn't pay attention to such a bold move, because sensational headlines of the day were related to long gasoline lines, electrical shortages, and Watergate. Even 30 years later, consumers won't read in newsprint why our dollar is dependent upon oil. Keeping oil priced exclusively in dollars was enough cause for waging war in Iraq after Iraq's bold switch to EURO oil payments in 2002. The White House public relations campaign chose to pick emotional reason for invasion. OPEC, North Korea, Iran, and Russia now plan to trade in EUROs as the dollar continues to slide in value.

More here: http://www.thinkandask.com/news/thedollar.html

Input Devices

Submission + - Sex with your computer?

John Rivera writes: "I've been talking with some friends and we figure that someone, somewhere, has tried to have sex with their computers before. I'm a long time lurker of slashdot and it seems most logical to me that that person is here. Even if you haven't tried, where would you put your junk? Would it be raw components or some sort of perverted dongle attached to your USB drive? As for my thoughts: The only plausible place would be the hard drive bay, but even then.. you might lose something down there. What does slashdot think?"
Java

Submission + - Blu-ray: CES Update Playback Not Future Proof! (betanews.com)

im just cannonfodder writes: A twist in the format war that will leave early adopters a little angry but, "we were told: "They knew what they were getting into.""!

FTA: Blu-ray may have taken a commanding lead in the next-generation format war, but the group has a big problem looming: early supporters of the format will be left out in the cold when the Blu-ray Disc Association introduces BD Profile 2.0

Unlike HD DVD, which mandated features such as local storage, a second video and audio decoder for picture-in-picture, and a network connection from the very beginning, the companies behind Blu-ray took a different approach. Initial hardware players lacked these capabilities in order to keep costs down.

None of the Profile 1.0 players can be upgraded to Profile 1.1, which was finalized recently, with the exception of the PlayStation 3 — whose update arrived in mid-December. Likewise, Profile 2.0 is expected to arrive in October bringing Internet connectivity that Profile 1.1 players lack.

Representatives at the Blu-ray booth at CES told BetaNews that the PlayStation 3 is currently the only player they would recommend, due to upcoming changes to the platform. But Pioneer, Samsung, Panasonic and Sony have all been selling standalone Blu-ray players to customers.

In order to allay confusion, the BDA has adopted special labels that will be placed on Blu-ray movies. Those with a "Bonus View" sticker will require Profile 1.1 players, while those with "BD Live" will require Profile 2.0.

In addition, the BD-J interactivity layer, based on Java, has continued to evolve since the introduction of Blu-ray Profile 1.0. This means that early players may have a buggy implementation and perhaps more importantly, they are not powerful enough to play the latest films properly.

When BetaNews asked developers of BD Live whether they were concerned about a backlash from early adopters who supported the format from the beginning, we were told: "They knew what they were getting into."
http://www.betanews.com/article/Bluray_Early_adopters_knew_what_they_were_getting_into/1199841379

Government

Submission + - Canada set to unveil DMCA-style legislation (theglobeandmail.com)

plen246 writes: Following the American example — the underwhelming success that it has been — the current Canadian government is set to unveil sweeping new copyright legislation aimed at pleasing the media conglomerates and appeasing the outspoken US Ambassador to Canada, David Wilkins. The government has seemingly developed the legislation out of sight of the public, and will likely try to pass it with little or no discussion in the next two to three weeks. Given the short timeline, the only hope for clear-minded, education- and culture-loving Canadians may be that opposition parties stand up to the minority government and force them to rework the more contentious parts of it. The upcoming legislation is reported to rely heavily on Digital Rights Management (DRM) — a standard which is rapidly being abandoned by the music industry itself. This all comes despite a government-commissioned study that found that file-sharing helps the music industry and another suggesting DRM violates Canadian privacy laws.

Feed Engadget: AT&T CEO outs 3G iPhone: "You'll have it next year" (engadget.com)

Filed under: Cellphones

Of course the 3G iPhone is coming, that's clearly in the evolution plan. As Jobs said himself, it's only a matter of time until improved batteries allow for it. Still, when AT&T's CEO Randall Stephenson says, "You'll have it next year," well, our ears tend to perk up. The remark was made at a meeting of the Churchill Club in Santa Clara. He didn't say how much it could cost admitting that Jobs and Apple "will dictate what the price of the phone is." However, it wouldn't surprise us if fits back into the $599 slot vacated by the 8GB iPhone while toting a full 16GB of flash like the iPod touch.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!


The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Adobe allows dynamic ads into pdf files

Starker_Kull writes: Adobe is now allowing dynamic ads to be placed in downloaded pdfs by Yahoo for an undisclosed amount of money. This capability seems ripe for abuse, and personally makes me even more interested in an alternative page layout format. Despite being open, the pdf standard is still subject to the arbitrary whims of a company bent on squeezing every last cent out of its dominant standard.

Slashdot Top Deals

"Why can't we ever attempt to solve a problem in this country without having a 'War' on it?" -- Rich Thomson, talk.politics.misc

Working...