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Comment Re:So what? (Score 2, Informative) 770

For the first time ever in a new Windows installation I didn't feel compelled to immediately set up my video drivers. Everything worked smoothly enough. Of course, I did eventually load them up, but it didn't even require a reboot. Needless to say, I'm very pleased with Windows 7 so far.

Comment Re:"Right" to a private cell phone? (Score 1) 232

Sure, we can turn our cellphones off ... but the slippery slope leads to the idea that we shouldn't expect privacy in our homes because they have windows and doors

Actually, you don't have a right to privacy to anything that can be seen through your windows. It's called plain sight. It's the reason you should never just let a cop inside your house (anything illegal sitting around is fair game) or just leave the baggy of weed in your car on the front seat. Because it's plainly visible and anyone can see it.

Comment Re:I don't get it (Score 1) 219

Ok, so it destroys the credibility of the journal, as well as the credibility of any papers coauthored by this individual, and destroys the credibility of anyone who decided that getting published (by allowing El Naschie to get his name on the paper) was more important than academic rigor. I don't see the long term, lasting harm.

Comment Re:FAAAAAKKKEE (Score 1) 140

Differences in the sound reflected in your example are because of the differences in frequency in the originating sound. The sound rangefinding they're using uses one specific frequency and is going to be pretty darn close. Unless they're also using laser rangefinding as well to compare the difference, I don't think there's anyway to distinguish what sort've material an object is made of with just sound.
Space

Submission + - Vibrations on the Sun may 'shake' the Earth (newscientist.com)

mencomenco writes: "What do dropped mobile phone calls, mysterious signals in undersea communications cables, and tiny tremors on the Earth have in common? They are all caused by vibrations on the Sun, according to one team of scientists, reported in New Scientist. But other researchers question the claim, arguing that the pulsations may never escape the Sun's surface in the first place."
GNOME

Submission + - Ubuntu, GNOME, Firefox Top Desktop Linux Survey

__aajbyc7391 writes: The results from DesktopLinux.com's annual survey are in, and the big winners are Ubuntu, GNOME, and Firefox this year. Also of note is the fact that this year's survey produced 38,500 votes versus 14,535 votes over the same number of days in a similar survey one year ago, suggesting that the use of Linux on the desktop is on the rise. Specifically, Ubuntu (including Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and Edubuntu) garnered 30 percent of the distribution votes, GNOME surpassed KDE for the first time in the site's surveying history, beating out Europe's favorite desktop by 10 percentage points, Firefox dominated at 60 percent share, and SUSE showed a big gain to reach 21 percent (way ahead of Redhat/Fedora). Check out the nice analysis graphs, here, and also the raw data, here.
Censorship

Submission + - Wikipedia fights NBC's "Justice" group (10zenmonkeys.com)

destinyland writes: "Wikipedia was labelled a "corporate sex offender" by the group behind NBC Dateline's "To Catch a Predator" series — who also began re-directing any visitors from Wikipedia to a critical page. The group also tagged LiveJournal and YouTube as "offenders" for failing to delete enough accounts of suspected pedophiles. But after a thoughtful debate, Wikipedia simply changed their link-formatting so their readers wouldn't be re-directed. They also allowed the group to continue criticizing Wikipedia's policies on Wikipedia rather than censoring them. Though as this article points out, "Wikipedia remained ungrateful when Perverted Justice helpfully pointed out which Wikipedia editors they thought were pedophiles.""

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