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Data Storage

So You've Lost a $38 Billion File 511

smooth wombat writes "Imagine you're reformatting a hard drive so you can do a clean install but then realize that you have also reformatted the back up hard drive. No problem. You reach for your back up tapes only to find out that the information on the tapes is unreadable. Now imagine the information that is lost was worth $38 billion. This scenario is apparently what happened in July to the Alaska Department of Revenue. From the article: 'Nine months worth of information concerning the yearly payout from the Alaska Permanent Fund was gone: some 800,000 electronic images that had been painstakingly scanned into the system months earlier, the 2006 paper applications that people had either mailed in or filed over the counter, and supporting documentation such as birth certificates and proof of residence.' Using the 300 cardboard boxes containing all the information, staff worked overtime for several months to rescan everything at an additional cost of $200,000."
Businesses

Submission + - Outsourcing Costs Companies Money

An anonymous reader writes: A new report from CIO Insight says that outsourcing I.T. actually costs — not saves — most firms money. From the article: "Outsourcing may be commonplace, but it continues to confound IT executives' expectations. Take the common myth that companies outsource to save money. Not only is this not true in half the cases, but our survey shows that most companies aren't saving money by outsourcing."

The study is based on responses from more than 400 I.T. professionals, and the article includes a slideshow of the report's findings.
Input Devices

Submission + - Looking for an industrial off-the-shelf USB remote

Anonymous Coward writes: "I work for a company that develops tools for the automotive industry. We would like to add a remote control to one of our products but do not want to design it from scratch. We have looked at a lot of off-the-shelf remotes but they are all made for light usage; i.e. giving PowerPoint presentations. We tried using this remote and it worked perfectly until we brought it to a plant. Once at the plant we found that the battery died too quickly because of the high number of button presses (2000 — 3000 a day). The contacts on the buttons also degraded quickly because they ended up covered in dirt and oil which made it hard to push the buttons. Has anyone on Slashdot come across a similar problem? What solutions did you come up with?"
Security

Submission + - Hacker Voice Radio - Interview Gary Mckinnon

An anonymous reader writes: Present: Belial DarkNature Solo. The last of the season. It has been a long long time. But 6 has come to end. We interview Gary McKinnon AKA Solo.We go through all the questions asked by our listeners and add a few of our own. See you all in 3 weeks time! Download the show here.
Businesses

Submission + - Broadband providers impose bandwidth limits

An anonymous reader writes: Interesting article in today's Boston Globe regarding treatment of "high-bandwidth users" by local broadband providers.
(http://www.boston.com/business/personaltech/artic les/2007/03/12/not_so_fast_broadband_providers_tel l_big_users?page=full)
It appears that your acceptable-use policy can be interpreted in unexpected ways.
Google

Submission + - Google assists Indian goverment censorship

An anonymous reader writes: Google's Orkut has made a deal to provide IP addresses of posters of content deemed objectionable by Bombay police. They object to, among others, posts against certain Indian personalities, young women admiring Indian mobsters, and, amazingly, "anti-Indian words" (!).
Space

Submission + - New Horizons Probe Returns New Images of Jupiter

SeaDour writes: "The Pluto-bound New Horizons space probe, launched a little over a year ago, recently succeeded in passing through a narrow navigational keyhole by Jupiter. Using the gas giant's tremendous gravity, the craft now has a significant boost toward its final destination, shaving three years off its journey. As it passed through the Jovian system, the probe took some fantastic images of the neighborhood, including detailed observations of erupting volcanoes on Io, time-lapse photography of Jupiter's tumultuous atmosphere, and even the faint ring system that was first discovered in Voyager photography. These new images prove the tremendous capabilities of the small probe, which is set to reach Pluto in 2015."
Intel

Intel Stomps Into Flash Memory 130

jcatcw writes "Intel's first NAND flash memory product, the Z-U130 Value Solid-State Drive, is a challenge to other hardware vendors. Intel claims read rates of 28 MB/sec, write speeds of 20 MB/sec., and capacity of 1GB to 8GB, which is much smaller than products from SanDisk. 'But Intel also touts extreme reliability numbers, saying the Z-U130 has an average mean time between failure of 5 million hours compared with SanDisk, which touts an MTBF of 2 million hours.'"
Games

The Ten Most Important Games 577

Taking a page from the National Film Preservation Board, the History of Science and Technology Collections at Stanford University and a group of five prestigious games industry figures have inducted ten games into a sort of 'canon'. The New York Times reports that some of these titles represent the start of weighty gaming genres, while all are laudable for their place in gaming history. "[Henry] Lowood and the four members of his committee -- the game designers Warren Spector and Steve Meretzky; Matteo Bittanti, an academic researcher; and Christopher Grant, a game journalist -- announced their list of the 10 most important video games of all time: Spacewar! (1962), Star Raiders (1979), Zork (1980), Tetris (1985), SimCity (1989), Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990), Civilization I/II (1991), Doom (1993), Warcraft series (beginning 1994) and Sensible World of Soccer (1994)." Most likely, future years will see additional titles inducted into this game canon.
Privacy

Submission + - Follow up Q&A: Professor Chastised For Using

CTLT writes: "Dr. Paul Cesarini, an assistant professor in the Visual Communication & Technology Education department here at BGSU, began a discussion that we wanted to continue here on Interact at the Center. The original article, Caught in the Network, from the Chronicle of Higher Education, began a discussion on academic freedom, IT controls and limits, and the fine balance between the two. Paul was kind enough to respond to some of the comments and questions he has received as well as reflect his experiences over the past few weeks: I appreciate how many of you read my article, commented on it in various online venues, and linked to it so that others might read it. Please keep in mind my goal in writing this piece was not to denigrate our Information Technology Services office in any way. As I mentioned in the article, I worked there for years, and I still know and respect the folks that work there. Heck, our Director of ITS even had me over for Thanksgiving dinner a while back. Our ITS office, if I may attempt to personify it as a single entity for a moment, works tirelessly to make sure our network infrastructure remains stable, dependable, and active. Without the often thankless efforts of this office, we wouldn't be able to send a single piece of email. We wouldn't be able to rely on a vast, yet standard set of software tools that are officially supported on campus. We we wouldn't even be able to get our paychecks."

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