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Microsoft

Submission + - Powershell Analyzer RC1 Released

klumsy writes: "Powershell Analyzer RC1 is released. It has been said "Comparing Powershell to Bash or any of the UNIX shells is the difference between shooting a bullet and throwing it." This is also even more true of Powershell Analyzer where the richness of the object pipeline is self evident, and the user experience — programming at the speed of thought is a reality. Check out a video of it at http://www.powershellanalyzer.com/demos or download it at http://www.powershell.com/"
Announcements

Submission + - Collabnet buying Sourceforge

An anonymous reader writes: Collabnet is buying Sourceforge. "CollabNet® and VA Software Sign Asset Purchase Agreement for Acquisition of SourceForge® Enterprise Edition Business by CollabNet" What does this mean for the future of Sourceforge.net?
Software

Submission + - OpenOffice vs MS Office 2007, a sad day for OO

NexTechNews writes: "With advocates of OpenSource bashing on Microsoft Office 2007 for its high price tag and supposed bloatedness, one blogger decided to take the plunge and put the latest from Microsoft and the Latest from OpenOffice and put the 2 systems to the test. The most astonishing test was probably the simplest possible, just opening up some OOXML and ODF format files.

The result though might put some opensource viewers to shame as Microsoft Office not only opened the files 5 times faster than the opensource counterpart, it also managed to use 4 times LESS memory than open office 2.2 did. The reviews show that OpenOffice has definitly made leaps and bounds since its previous versions, but its in no way ready to outperform MS Office 2007.

This comes at a critical time as many offices are deciding whether the upgrade to MS office is worthwhile when free alternatives exist. But the review shows what many don't see, while office integrates a new ribbon and may look like its bloated microsoft managed to keep performance leaps ahead of its opensource competitor, while still including a rich UI with new things like the Citation Manager that OpenOffice 2.2 just flat out doesn't have a counterpart for."
First Person Shooters (Games)

Submission + - Quake Full Speed On Nintendo DS

Croakyvoice writes: Simon J Hall has updated his port of the Classic First Person Shooter Quake to the Nintendo DS. This release now plays at near full speed and all the levels in the game are now playable and has full support for mods and also wifi network play, via an access point.
Quake

Submission + - Quake Ported to DS And Full Speed With Wifi Play

An anonymous reader writes: Simon J Hall has updated his port of the Classic First Person Shooter Quake to the Nintendo DS. This release now plays at near full speed and all the levels in the game are now playable and has full support for mods and also wifi network play, via an access point.
United States

Submission + - Desalination VS Water Transfers

cakilmer writes: "Desalination VS Water Transfers


A couple weeks back I blogged about a widely published report that held that the west was entering into a prolonged drying spell. The New York Times detailed solutions being proposed & implimented that included desalination.

What was not mentioned was an idea that will be bandied about during a meeting in Calgary. That meeting will be held next week in Calgary. It addresses the idea of massive water transfers from Canada to the USA & Mexico to address water shortages. You won't hear about it south of the border however. The only place this is mentioned is in Calgary.



April 25, 2007 April 25, 2007

Next week, government officials and academics from the three countries will gather in Calgary for the two-day North American Future 2025 Project (see page 6)where they'll brainstorm ideas on how the continent should implement policies to deal with various challenges — including security, energy and labour.


But it's the agenda on water that has activists concerned, given that the discussions will be held behind closed doors without public scrutiny, said Maude Barlow, national chairwoman of the Council of Canadians.

"We want this out in the light of day. We tried contacting them and they said this meeting is private," Barlow said. "How could it be private if it is setting up the political and policy framework for the future of North America?"

An outline of the proceedings states that climate change is expected to greatly exacerbate water shortages in the United States and Mexico while Canada, which has the world's largest supply of fresh water in the Great Lakes and elsewhere, is not expected to suffer to the same extent.

It goes on to state that "creative" solutions — such as water transfers and artificial diversions of fresh water — may be needed to address the "profound changes" that are bound to occur south of the border.



Water transfers is something that's hotly debated in Canada ... but you don't hear much about it in the lower 48-though President Bush has mentioned his support for the idea. Asked about the possibility of water transfers world renowned water expert Peter Gleick said the economics simply weren't there. Mr. Gleick says.




I actually think this enormous controversy over bulk water exports is a little bit silly because no one's going to be able to afford it," he says."And frankly I think some of these people who complain because they have been prohibited from doing it, I think we've saved them a lot of money. I think they should have been allowed to do it and go bankrupt."


Santa Barbara looked into the idea several years back and decided on water desalination even at then current prices.

Never the less, according to a joint report entitled Global Water Futures produced by the CSIS and the Sandia National Laboratories.



Finding 5: Solutions must be innovative, revolutionary, and self-sustaining. Current
trajectories for improvement in freshwater availability and quality are inadequate to meet global
needs in a timely way. Innovative solutions must be found and employed that replace steady,
incremental rates of progress with dramatic, revolutionary changes. These solutions must be designed to be self-sustaining over the long-term.


Given the recognized urgency of the need for water solutions and the fact that the meetings are behind closed doors, it looks like much of the time & effort will be put into expediting Bush's desire for water transfers-rather than doing any actual brain storming.

This is a shame. Especially as likely it will suck up what federal institutional energy there is behind water desalination R&D. Its especially shameful because the feds could get so much more bang for their buck out desalination R&D.

So if you happen to know someone who knows someone who is attending the meeting in Calgary next week...be sure to mention to them that basic research suggests that the cost of water desalination & transport will collapse in the next 5 to 10 years.

Here are three promising avenues of research mentioned in this blog from three different research labs.

1. Lawrence Livermore


2. UCLA

3. University of Rochester

Here's a strategy for turning municipal sewage into pure water and oil.

Here's a strategy for cutting the cost of pumping water

To hasten the pace of research, I would greatly increase the amount of money available to federal university & corporate labs for water desalination research. As well, I would include DARPA in the effort to fund start up companies. Further, I would suggest three ways to focus research dollars.

The first would be to make available prize money like the X-Prize that Newt Gingrich touts as a frugal way to get the most bang for the research buck. I blog about this in a piece called harvesting research unknown unknowns.

The second suggestion would be to attack known unkowns by employing a much less publicized method of crowdsourcing scientific research which I discuss in detail here.

How does a research administrator best deploy his dollars between projects competing for research dollars? Choosing rightly between known knowns is difficult. In fast paced industries companies use something called prediction markets. I discuss this strategy here.

Finally, make plain to those in attendance that the pace of scientific innovation in the next 20 years will likely be more than the last 100 years. They ain't seen nuthin yet.
"
Power

Submission + - Linux Kernel 2.6.21 and Tickless Kernel

kev009 writes: "http://www2.kev009.com:8081/wp/2007/04/26/linux-ke rnel-2621-and-tickless-kernel-config_no_hz/

Linux Kernel 2.6.21 has been announced. Linus writes: "So the big change during 2.6.21 is all the timer changes to support a tickless system (and even with ticks, more varied time sources). Thanks (when it no longer broke for lots of people ;) go to Thomas Gleixner and Ingo Molnar and a cadre of testers and coders.""

Feed World's "only" PowerFest '94 SNES cartridge up for auction (engadget.com)

Filed under: Gaming

We have to admit, we've seen some pretty zany stuff in the Nintendo realm this month, but this one probably takes top honors. For the fanboys and girls, the words "PowerFest '94" and "Nintendo World Championships II" immediately incite fits of giddiness, and for those sulking in the uninformed camp, here's the skinny: just 32 of these brutally ugly and oversized cartridges were ever manufactured, and after the round of tournaments played with them in 1994, all but one was reportedly "given back to Nintendo and reused for parts." The cart itself housed Level 1-1 of Super Mario Lost Levels, five laps around the first track on Super Mario Kart, and a home run derby from Ken Griffey Jr. Winning Run, all of which were set to a timer and channeled out to other systems to monitor the scores of everyone involved. Needless to say, owning this prized possession could indeed fetch a pretty penny, and if you've ever wondered just how much a one of a kind SNES cart would run you, we'll give you 25,000 or so guesses. Click on through for a few more snapshots.

[Thanks, Casey]

Continue reading World's "only" PowerFest '94 SNES cartridge up for auction

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


Feed 0wning Vista from the boot (theregister.com)

The VBootkit authors speak out

Interview Federico Biancuzzi interviews Nitin and Vipin Kumar, authors of VBootkit, a rootkit that is able to load from Windows Vista boot-sectors. They discuss the "features" of their code, the support of the various versions of Vista, the possibility to place it inside the BIOS (it needs around 1,500 bytes), and the chance to use it to bypass Vista's product activation or avoid DRM.


Programming

Submission + - Adobe Open Sources Flex SDK under MPL!

peterarm writes: "Adobe is open sourcing the Flex SDK under the MPL! The FAQ has all the information. Also, Robert Scoble interviews Ely Greenfield (a Flex SDK architect) and David Wadhwani (Flex Product Line VP) about the announcement at PodTech."
Spam

Submission + - Largest. Anti-Spam. Suit. Ever.

Jim Manico writes: "I'm grateful to the fine gentlemen at Project Honeypot. They are about to file the largest anti-spam lawsuit in the history of the internets. "The suit will be filed in U.S. District Court in Alexandria on behalf of Project Honey Pot, a service of Unspam Technologies LLC, a Utah-based anti-spam company that consults with private companies and government agencies." Check out the upcoming Washington Post article at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2007/04/25/AR2007042503098_pf.html"
AMD

Submission + - What if Microsoft or Google bought AMD ?

noddyxoi writes: "So everybody knowns that AMD is in huge debt right now, over ATI acquisition and operational costs... What if the solution for that was for AMD to be acquired by Microsoft or Google ? Which one would you prefer and why ?"
Windows

Submission + - Vista SP1 due in the Autumn?

mad zambian writes: "Early news on Vista SP1, taken from Personal Computer World. PCW
"Intel chief executive Paul Otellini has let slip the release date of the first service pack for Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system.
Otellini said during an earnings call for the chipmaker's first-quarter financial results that Windows Vista Service Pack 1 will probably arrive "in the October-November time frame".
Rest of the story here. Story"

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