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Comment Re:Duh. (Score 1) 1601

Sorry, no, that doesn't follow. That line of logic suggests that, every time I open my mouth about a subject I'm required to spend equal time arguing for my opponent's view point. If there are more people who want to vote for someone, you have to expect that more people will write positively about that person. You can't fight math.

Privacy

Anonymous Anger Rampant On the Web 399

the4thdimension writes "In a story that may bring out the 'duh' in you, CNN has a story about how anonymous anger is rampant on the Internet. Citing various reasons, it attempts to explain why sites like MyBiggestComplaint and Just Rage exist and why anger via the web seems to be everywhere. Various reasons include: anonymity, lack of rules, and lack of immediate consequences. Whatever the reason, they describe that online anger has resulted in real-life violence and suggest methods for parents and teens to cope with e-aggression and to learn to be aware of it." I can't figure out what makes me angrier: my habit of anonymously trolling web forums, or my video game playing.
Space

New Class of Pulsars Discovered 93

xyz writes "NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has discovered a new class of pulsars which emit purely in gamma rays. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star, and of the nearly 1,800 cataloged so far, only a small fraction emit at frequencies higher than radio waves. The gamma-ray-only pulsar, which lies within a supernova remnant known as CTA 1, is silent across parts of the electromagnetic spectrum where pulsars are normally found, indicating a new class of pulsars. It is located 'about 4,600 light-years away in the constellation Cepheus. Its lighthouse-like beam sweeps Earth's way every 316.86 milliseconds. The pulsar, which formed in a supernova explosion about 10,000 years ago, emits 1,000 times the energy of our sun.'"
Power

10 IT Power-Saving Myths Debunked 359

snydeq writes "InfoWorld examines 10 power-saving assumptions IT has been operating under in its quest to rein in energy costs vs. the permanent energy crisis. Under scrutiny, most such assumptions wither. From true CPU efficiency, to the life span effect of power-down frequency on servers, to SSD power consumption, to switching to DC in the datacenter, get the facts before setting your IT energy strategy."
Earth

Removing CO2 From the Air Efficiently 487

Canadian scientists have created a device that efficiently removes CO2 from the atmosphere. "The proposed air capture system differs from existing carbon capture and storage technology ... while CCS involves installing equipment at, say, a coal-fired power plant to capture CO2 produced during the coal-burning process, ... air capture machines will be able to literally remove the CO2 present in ambient air everywhere. [The team used] ... a custom-built tower to capture CO2 directly from the air while requiring less than 100 kilowatt-hours of electricity per tonne of carbon dioxide."
Science

Studies Say Ideology Trumps Facts 784

Anti-Globalism writes "We like to think that people will be well informed before making important decisions, such as who to vote for, but the truth is that's not always the case. Being uninformed is one thing, but having a population that's actively misinformed presents problems when it comes to participating in the national debate, or the democratic process. If the findings of some political scientists are right, attempting to correct misinformation might do nothing more than reinforce the false belief."
Power

7th-Grader Designs Three Dimensional Solar Cell 719

Hugh Pickens writes "12-year-old William Yuan's invention of a highly-efficient, three-dimensional nanotube solar cell for visible and ultraviolet light has won him an award and a $25,000 scholarship from the Davidson Institute for Talent Development. 'Current solar cells are flat and can only absorb visible light'" Yuan said. 'I came up with an innovative solar cell that absorbs both visible and UV light. My project focused on finding the optimum solar cell to further increase the light absorption and efficiency and design a nanotube for light-electricity conversion efficiency.' Solar panels with his 3D cells would provide 500 times more light absorption than commercially-available solar cells and nine times more than cutting-edge 3D solar cells. 'My next step is to talk to manufacturers to see if they will build a working prototype,' Yuan said. "If the design works in a real test stage, I want to find a company to manufacture and market it.""
Mozilla

Submission + - Interview with Mozilla's Frank Hecker (oreilly.com)

ruphus13 writes: There has been some confusion around Mozilla.org and Mozilla.com, and the relationship between the not-for-profit .org site, and the 'for-profit' .com site. This audio interview helps clarify the common mandate of the two organizations, as well as the future plans for promoting the use of Open Source as well as Mozilla products. From the article, "In this 25 minute interview you'll hear Frank Hecker talking about Mozilla's mission and structure, as well as his own personal views on how open source could provide a model for involving citizens in participatory democracy." There is a text-transcript too, and details of the organization structures and mandates are outlined there.
Businesses

Submission + - What is my computer-bound time worth?

MythoBeast writes: Like many software engineers, my productivity is often bound by the speed of my computer. Because of the complexity of the code base I'm working on I estimate that my employer spends about $600/week for me to sharpen my nerf-launching skills or browse web sites while I wait for a compile to tell me what I need to do next. As a rough estimation this could be cut down to a quarter of that time through the expenditure of roughly $2500 for an updated system, recouping the expense in less than two months.

This is only a SWAG, though, and isn't likely to convince the monetary minded. Does anyone know of any actual studies that have been done to determine how much productivity is gained when you double or quadruple the speed of the computer the worker has to work with?
It's funny.  Laugh.

Spore Almost Ready for Production, Complete With "Sporn" 127

It seems that there has been some backlash over questionable creature creation with the Spore creation tool. Some of this content has been cleverly and obviously nicknamed 'Sporn'. For better or worse, Spore's Producer Thomas Vu is saying the long-awaited game should be ready for production in about a week, keeping it on track for the announced September 7th release.

Cyber-Goggles Record and Identify Every Object You See 108

RemyBR writes "Researchers at the University of Tokyo have developed a smart video goggle system that records everything the wearer looks at, recognizes and assigns names to objects that appear in the video. Advanced programs then go back and create an easily searchable database of the recorded footage. Designed to function as a high-tech memory aid, these 'Cyber Goggles' promise to make the act of losing your keys a thing of the past, according to head researcher professor Tatsuya Harada. 'In a demonstration at the University of Tokyo last week, 60 everyday items -- including a potted begonia, CD, hammer and cellphone -- were programmed into the Cyber Goggle memory. As the demonstrator walked around the room viewing and recording the various objects, the names of the items appeared on the goggle screen. The demonstrator was then able to do a search for the various items and retrieve the corresponding video.'" Add in facial recognition technology and this would make for a great aid at conferences and family reunions.
The Courts

Submission + - SPAM: Va. Supreme Courtupholds US felony SPAM conviction

coondoggie writes: "The Virginia Supreme Court today upheld the nation's first felony SPAM conviction, according to the Virginia Attorney General. In November 2004, Jeremy Jaynes was convicted by a jury in Loudoun County Circuit Court on three counts of violating Virginia's groundbreaking Anti-Spam Act, which became in law in 2003. This marked the first ever felony conviction in a SPAM case, and the case received international attention. Jaynes was regarded as the eighth-worst spammer in the world on The Spamhaus Project's Registry of Known Spammer Organizations at the time of his arrest. At that time, prosecutors from the Attorney General's Computer Crime Section argued to the jury that Jaynes, utilizing AOL's private computer network, located in Virginia, peddled his products to unsuspecting victims around the world. A search of a Jaynes residence yielded a cache of compact disks with 176 million e-mail addresses and 1.3 billion e-mail user names, police at the time said.In its 4-3 ruling, the court rejected Jaynes' claim that the state law violates both the First Amendment and the interstate commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution. [spam URL stripped]"
Link to Original Source
Toys

Flying Humans 330

mlimber sends us to the NYTimes for a story about flying people who jump from planes or other high locations wearing a wing suit akin to a flying squirrel's. Their efforts have potential military and Xtreme sports applications. The story profiles, with video, one guy who wants to be the first to jump from a plane and land without a parachute (and live). Here's a YouTube video of another of these fliers skimming six feet above skiers in the Swiss Alps. Quoting: "Modern suit design features tightly woven nylon sewn between the legs and between the arms and torso, creating wings that fill with air and create lift, allowing for forward motion and aerial maneuvers while slowing descent. As the suits, which cost about $1,000, have become more sophisticated, so have the pilots. The best fliers, and there are not many, can trace the horizontal contours of cliffs, ridges and mountainsides."
Security

Submission + - Will Apple open the iPod Touch to Developers? (cnet.com)

An anonymous reader writes: With the launch of the new iPod Touch, the question every developer must be asking is: Will Apple open up the platform? Apple passed the blame on the locked-down status of the iPhone to a need to protect AT&T's/Cingular's fragile wireless network. Earlier this year, Jobs told Newsweek: "You don't want your phone to be an open platform... You need it to work when you need it to work. Cingular doesn't want to see their West Coast network go down because some application messed up." Since the new iPod doesn't work on the cellular carrier's networks, there shouldn't be any need to protect AT&T from malicious or poorly developed applications. Will Steve Jobs open up the platform, or will he find someone else (as he has done so often in the past) to blame? CNet has more on the story.
Security

Submission + - The 8 most dangerous consumer technologies (computerworld.com)

jcatcw writes: Instant messaging tops the list of consumer grade technologies that have invaded the work place without IT support, and sometimes despite IT's best efforts to keep them out. DeKalb Medical Center in Georgia screens traffic to be sure that Web-based email isn't allowing sensitive data out of an internal network. Other organizations are trying to support one, and only one, brand of smartphone or pda. DeKalb is thinking of implementing Lotus Sametime for internal messaging rather than continue their current ban on IM altogether. At the moment, employee education may be the only safeguard against camera phones grabbing confidential data at the medical center. Virtual worlds, flash drives, widgets, and VoIP are all creating their own problems.

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