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Education

Submission + - Why Are College Dorms Such Dumps?

theodp writes: "'I will be paying for this overcrowded, unsanitary, fly-infested, sinking dorm with hostile doorways for what could be half my life.' So writes 'Stephan K.' of the trailer that serves as his home-away-from-home at Bard College, where students can shell out $36,534 in tuition and $10,346 for room-and-board for such luxurious digs. Which begs the bigger question: With the nation's brightest minds on their payrolls, why can't universities and colleges figure out how to provide students with something better than slumlord-level accommodations?"
Censorship

Submission + - San Fran' Chronicle secretly censors their webpage

ahbi writes: The San Francisco Chronicle has recently activated a devious system by which it deceives commenters on its website, SFGate.com. Here's how it works:

If you make a comment on an article posted at SFGate, and if the site moderators then subsequently delete your comment for whatever reason, it will only appear as deleted to the other readers. HOWEVER, your comment will NOT appear to be deleted if viewed from your own computer! The Chronicle's goal is to trick deleted commenters into not knowing their comments were in fact deleted.
The Internet

Submission + - Sky's botched Google migration (blogspot.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Rupert Murdoch-owned British ISP Sky is migrating their customers to the Google Apps platform, and the customer experience is terrible. Their 1m customers were told that they need to change their client settings to enable SMTP Authentication and other settings on a certain date — but not to do it before then or their e-mail would break; but if you don't do it on the date your e-mail will also break. Oh, and if you're a POP user you also need to enable that manually in the 'Skoogle' interface, as seemingly they chose not to run a system-wide command to allow it for all users. In addition, if you want help then you're pretty much on your own. One user has made 7 support calls and still not been able to access his e-mail since the migration. Hardly surprising that the story has made the papers with their helpdesk in meltdown. It does make you wonder why they simply didn't put proxy servers in place to proxy the new service by modifying the old settings in the network and give their customers time to switch over without their e-mail breaking in the meantime. Or even a simple ActiveX tool to help out the less technical users. Apparently the move is all about a greater customer experience for their users. An interesting way of showing it.
Handhelds

Submission + - No Bars For iPhone Brits

An anonymous reader writes: The newest iPhone users, who bought the Apple phones when they went on sale in England on Nov. 9, are reporting persistent signal-strength problems on O2, the UK's only iPhone service provider. InfoWeek blogger Alex Wolfe says there's a debate as to whether O2 or the iPhone is at fault; it appears to be the handset, which is unusual since U.S. users haven't reported similar problems. Some 02 customers report that getting a replacement phone fixes things; others have had to do a software restore back to version 1.1.2 of the iPhone software.
Security

Submission + - Canadian Taser Death Sparks Canadian Uproar

e-scetic writes: Yesterday a video was put on YouTube depicting an obviously frightened and non-threatening Polish man being tasered by police and dying within minutes. The incident actually happened a month ago but police had been holding onto the video. It was just released.

The incident is causing a diplomatic "spat" between the Canadian and Polish governments, Canadians are horrified and in an uproar over it, and the Canadian government is calling for a review of police use of tasers.

Some links can be found here, here and here. Probably better to Google it, though.
Patents

Submission + - Obama plans major patent shake up

Stony Stevenson writes: Presidential hopeful Barack Obama has unveiled his technology strategy and is calling for an overhaul of the US patent system and the appointment of a national chief technology officer. The policy states that Obama wants to upgrade the national internet network to next-generation broadband and put in laws to encourage open access for all. He has also made clear his commitment to network neutrality, but it is his policies on patents that will raise eyebrows in Silicon Valley.
Government

Submission + - Demonoid tracker down again

An anonymous reader writes: According to demonoid.com, their servers have been pulled due to threats from the CRIA (Canadian Recording Industry Association).
Oracle

Submission + - SPAM: Oracle, VMware in pissing match

alphadogg writes: A VMware official on Friday scoffed at Oracle's contention that its recent entry into the virtualization market performs better than "the existing leader server virtualization product." Oracle CEO Larry Ellison said Wednesday the company will provide benchmark numbers to back its claims, but as of Friday, those figures were not available. VMWare has also responded by putting up a blog post titled "Ten Reasons Why Oracle Databases Run Best on VMware."
Link to Original Source
Businesses

Submission + - Some Best Buys not honoring Mario Galaxy Promotion

Selikoff writes: "As many of you may have heard Toys R Us began giving away $25 gift cards this week with every purchase of Super Mario Galaxy for the Wii. Not to be outdone, Best Buy announced it would match the offer with its own $25 gift certificates. There's been some noise in forums that some Best Buy stores are failing to honor this promotion. I decided to go to Best Buy, with SKU number in hand (although it shouldn't be needed), only to experience the same problems at my local store. Clerks refused to acknowledge or even type in the coupon, and only after fighting a manager for 10 minutes did he try the SKU number out, only to discover it was a real promotion. I don't know if I should chalk this one up to bad customer service or failure in the chain of command to notify store associates, but I'm sure there are a lot of Best Buy customers who failed to get their certificate this week."
Google

Submission + - Disappearing Gmail messages baffle users (computerworld.com.au)

An anonymous reader writes: When Jeneane Sessum logged into her Gmail account on the afternoon of October 27, she was greeted with a horrifying sight: an empty inbox. A Gmail user since 2004, Sessum, a social media consultant and writer in Atlanta, had thousands of messages there, enough to use up almost 30 percent of her allotted storage space. Since Gmail is her primary work and personal e-mail service, Sessum lost many important messages, including some she needed at that moment for a project. Days earlier in Chicago, Jessica Squazzo, a writer and editor, accessed Gmail and stared at her computer screen in disbelief: All messages from 2007 had disappeared from her inbox. Sessum and Squazzo are just two of a small but steady stream of Gmail users who regularly report losing some, many, or all of their messages without a clue as to why. Asked to comment about multiple lost-message reports in 11 different threads created in September and October in the Gmail Help forum, a Google spokesman declined to address any of the specific situations, citing privacy reasons. However, he did emphasize that, as far as Google is concerned, "most issues like this are a result of phishing attacks or compromised passwords — or sometimes simply messages mistakenly deleted or marked as spam — not a data corruption issue." A review of the Gmail Help forum reveals that reports of lost messages have become more common in the past year, with a higher volume of complaints occurring since July.
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - A Thief Hid In A Pond And Got Eaten By An Alligato (xuecast.com)

Primall writes: Last week, near Miami, Florida, a car thief was fleeing from the police after an unsuccessful attempt to steal a car. The man, still yet to be identified by the police, was in such a hurry, that he jumped into the nearby pond without reading the big sign nearby saying that there are alligators in the pond.
Google

Submission + - Is Google more dangerous than Microsoft

pcause writes: An article in CIO Insight asks the question: "Is Google more dangerous than Microsoft". Google says that they aren't evil, but Microsoft, Enron and a long list of others have said that too.

What does Google need to do to make you think that "do no evil" is just a marketing slogan as opposed to an ethic?
OS X

Submission + - Apple fails to deal with change to NZ DST

NTDaley writes: Debian may not have pushed their update for the NZ daylight savings change, but Apple has failed to deal with it at all. Their website instructs users to change the time manually, which is obviously inadequate for people who have to administer a large group of computers, or who need to have accurate times for other timezones. Fortunately a third party has created a fix for the problem.

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