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Medicine

Submission + - The $443 Million Smallpox Vaccine that Nobody Need 2

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Once feared for its grotesque pustules and 30% death rate, smallpox was eradicated worldwide as of 1978 and is known to exist only in the locked freezers of a Russian scientific institute and the US government. There is no credible evidence that any other country or a terrorist group possesses smallpox, but if there were an attack, the government could draw on $1 billion worth of smallpox vaccine it already owns to inoculate the entire US population and quickly treat people exposed to the virus. The vaccine, which costs the government $3 per dose, can reliably prevent death when given within four days of exposure. David Williams writes that over the last year, the Obama administration has aggressively pushed a $433-million plan to buy an experimental smallpox drug, despite uncertainty over whether it is needed or will work. So why did the government award a "sole-source" procurement to Siga Technologies Inc., whose controlling shareholder is billionaire Ronald O. Perelman, a longtime Democratic Party donor, calling for Siga to deliver 1.7 million doses of the drug for the nation's biodefense stockpile at a price of approximately $255 per dose. "We've got a vaccine that I hope we never have to use — how much more do we need?" says epidemiologist Dr. Donald A. Henderson who led the global eradication of smallpox for the WHO. "The bottom line is, we've got a limited amount of money.""
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Surface and Kinect are on a collision co (extremetech.com)

MrSeb writes: "If you have $8,400 kicking around, you can now preorder the monstrous Samsung SUR40, a 40-inch, Gorilla Glass-covered, 1080p, Microsoft Surface 2.0-powered 50-point-multitouch TV. First showed off in January 2011 at CES, it looks like you should start to see the SUR40 in banks, offices, and in extremely well-appointed bars and restaurants before the end of the year. The basic gist of the technology, called PixelSense, is this: Microsoft has worked with Samsung to create an LCD panel where every single pixel has a built-in sensor/camera. Below this LCD panel is the usual array of LEDs to illuminate the display, but it also includes infrared (IR) LEDs too. IR passes through the panel and the Gorilla Glass cover, and if there’s an obstacle on the other side — a finger, a mug, a piece of paper — the IR is reflected back into the sensors. A built-in computer (a dual-core Athlon X2 245e in this case) running Windows 7 and the Surface 2.0 software processes the output and then passes the sanitized data to whatever app is currently running. Now does this sound like another piece of exciting technology that also originated at Microsoft Research? Kinect, perhaps? What if you increased PixelSense's range to a few meters, like Kinect? What if you replaced the PC innards with an Xbox 360 or 720?"
Science

Submission + - Particle Smasher Hints at Physics Breakthrough (sciencemag.org)

sciencehabit writes: The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) may have made its first crack in modern physics. Physicists there have detected a charge-parity (CP) violation at least eight times as high as the standard model (the accepted theory of elementary particles) allows. If this disparity turns out to be real, it might help explain an enduring mystery of the universe: why there's lots of normal matter, but hardly any of the opposite—antimatter. In other words, why there is still "stuff" in the universe.
Oracle

Submission + - First Look: Oracle NoSQL Database (infoworld.com)

snydeq writes: "InfoWorld's Peter Wayner takes a first look at Oracle NoSQL Database, the company's take on the distributed key-value data store for the enterprise. 'There are dozens of small ways in which the tool is more thorough and sophisticated than the simpler NoSQL projects. You get a number of different options for increasing the durability in the face of a node crash or trading that durability for speed,' Wayner writes. 'Oracle NoSQL might not offer the heady fun and "just build it" experimentation of many of the pure open source NoSQL projects, but that's not really its role. Oracle borrowed the best ideas from these groups and built something that will deliver good performance to the sweet spot of the enterprise market.'"

Submission + - HTC being trolled by porn peddlers (techcrunch.com)

phaedrus5001 writes: From the article: "The porn peddlers at Vivid Entertainment have filed a cease and desist notice against the company for use of the “Vivid” name. According to TMZ, Vivid’s legal counsel filed the notice because they are afraid consumers will think the LTE-capable smartphone is somehow connected to Vivid’s adult video empire."
A porn-based smart phone? Siri would certainly be a lot more interesting...

Security

Submission + - Hacked VCU Server Exposes 176,000 Individuals (securityweek.com)

wiredmikey writes: A server at Virginia Commonwealth University, containing files with personal information on current and former VCU and VCU Health System faculty, staff, students and affiliates, was breached in October, during a two step attack.

The breached server contained data on 176,567 individuals including a name or eID, Social Security Number and, in some cases, date of birth, contact information, and various programmatic or departmental information.

The university said it would not automatically grant everyone potentially impacted by the incident identity theft protection, but said it would honor individual requests for such services.

Technology

Submission + - True 3D Display Draws Pixels In Space (diginfo.tv)

Lokitoth writes: Burton demonstrated a technology to draw animated 3D images in space, rather than on a 2D screen, by exciting oxygen and nitrogen in the air to give off light. The developers say: "This system can create about 50,000 dots per second, and its frame rate is currently about 10-15 fps. But we're working to improve the frame rate to 24-30 fps." Maybe the Japanese proposal to project 3D players to soccer fields world-wide is not so far-fetched.
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Steve Jobs eyed building Wi-Fi network (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Steve Jobs initially hoped to create his own network with the unlicensed spectrum that Wi-Fi uses rather than work with the mobile operators, said wireless industry legend John Stanton. Currently chairman at venture capital firm Trilogy Partners, Stanton said at a seminar in Seattle that Jobs "wanted to replace carriers... He and I spent a lot of time talking about whether synthetically you could create a carrier using Wi-Fi spectrum. That was part of his vision."

Submission + - Why Ford Just Became A Software Company (informationweek.com) 1

gManZboy writes: "Sometime early next year, Ford will mail USB sticks to about 250,000 owners of vehicles with its advanced touchscreen control panel. The stick will contain a major upgrade to the software for that screen. With it, Ford breaks the model in which the technology in a car essentially stayed unchanged from assembly line to junk yard--and Ford becomes a software company.

This shift created a hot new tech job at Ford: human-machine interface engineers--people who come from a range of backgrounds, from software development to mechanical engineers, and who can live in the worlds of art and science at once."

Comment Re:Yeah right (Score 1) 326

Agreed, with one caveat - it is a lot easier to driveby a piece of malware that just needs to be able to make HTTP connections than it is to driveby other malware, especially if behind a NAT/Firewall. After that you open the appropriate remote-exec port to point to the right machine, and commence partying.

Submission + - "Enhancing" the Photo (laughingsquid.com) 1

Lokitoth writes: Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign created a way to easily add objects to photographs, automatically computing occlusion and lighting to appear natural. Then they start showing off by adding animation to the mix, including what appears to be rudimentary physics.
Google

Submission + - Google+ To End Real Names Policy (activepolitic.com)

bs0d3 writes: After months of Google+ being unsuccessful at taking the edge over facebook, Google announces a new plan. Google executive Vic Gundotra announced yesterday that they will be "adding features that will 'support other forms of identity'". "Google+ will soon support pseudonyms", a major victory for security and privacy advocates. If Google+ get's rid of their "real names" policy they will finally be the social networking site that people will flock to when running away from facebook.

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