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Science

Submission + - What happens to a football player's neurons? (discovermagazine.com)

An anonymous reader writes: It seems like every week there's a new story about the consequences of all those concussions experienced by football players and other athletes — just a few days ago, the NY Times reported that some athletes diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's Disease may actually have a neural disease brought on by head trauma. But missing in these stories is an explanation of what head trauma actually does to the brain cells. Now Carl Zimmer has filled in the gap with a column that takes a look at how neurons respond to stress, and explains how stretching a neuron's axon turns its internal structure into "mush."

Submission + - iPad TV (skunkpost.com) 1

crimeandpunishment writes: Channel surfing and web surfing? Verizon is showing off a new application that would turn the iPad into a screen for its FIOS service. FIOS subscribers could channel surf right on the touch screen, and take live TV with them from room to room. They hope to have the app available next year.

Submission + - RIAA Wants Net Neutrality to Include Filtering (arstechnica.com) 1

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes: "The RIAA is now worried about the FCC's rulemaking concerning Net Neutrality. Specifically, they're worried that the rules might make it difficult for ISPs to filter out copyright infringement and child pornography, so they want to make sure that spying on and filtering internet traffic is okay, so long as it's being done for a good reason, even if it doesn't work correctly and blocks non-infringing content. Incidentally, the RIAA has some justification to lump child pornography and copyright infringement: after all, people might infringe upon the original cover art for the album 'Virgin Killer' which featured a naked under-aged girl in a way that some consider pornographic. The copyright on it belongs to RCA Records."

Submission + - Secrets of 'Magic' Antidepressant by Yale Team

An anonymous reader writes: Yale researchers have discovered how a novel anti-depressant can take effect in hours, rather than the weeks or months usually required for most drugs currently on the market. The findings, described in the August 20 issue of the journal Science, should speed development of a safe and easy-to-administer form of the anti-depressant ketamine, which has already proven remarkably effective in treating severely depressed patients. The Yale scientists found that, in rats, ketamine not only quickly improves depression-like behaviors but actually restores connections between brain cells damaged by chronic stress.

Submission + - BREIN Tracks Down Peter Sunde of The Pirate Bay 1

An anonymous reader writes: Slyck news is reporting that Tim Kuik, chairman of the IFPI, has tracked down and physically handed Peter Sunde of The Pirate Bay a June order from a Dutch court that demands they stop providing copyrighted torrents or face a 50,000 Euro a day fine. Now what?
Science

Submission + - UN urges probes behind weather disasters (montrealgazette.com)

Meshach writes: The United Nations is urging more investigation into the weather disasters taking place in Russia and Pakistan and whether they are caused by human-induced climate change. Although scientists are reluctant to overtly blame a single weather event on climate change, which measures longer term shifts over periods of years or decades the recent rash of disasters in such a short period of time has raised many questions.
Open Source

Submission + - Blood Frontier is Dead (bloodfrontier.com)

An anonymous reader writes: After an optimistic start, it appears as though a project to create a multi-player, open source FPS has caved in. Details about why the project failed are on the Blood Frontier homepage.
NASA

Submission + - NASA Set to Launch Solar NanoSail into Space (inhabitat.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Earlier this year the Japanese space agency successfully deployed and used a solar sail to propel its spacecraft Ikaros, and now NASA announced plans this week for its own solar sail mission. This fall it will launch the NanoSail-D into orbit 400 miles up with a Minotaur IV rocket. Once deployed, it will orbit for 17 weeks, proving the technology and allowing astronomers to snap lots of photos.
Security

Submission + - Facebook cell scam stings Justin Bieber fans (sophos.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A Facebook scam claiming to offer free tickets to a Justin Bieber concert is in fact signing up teenagers to an expensive premium rate mobile phone service.

Messages intercepted by Sophos researchers are appearing on Facebook reading:

WOW! Justin Bieber Is Giving Away Free Concert Tickets Now!

But teenage fans who click on the link hopeful of receiving free tickets are urged to enter their cellphone number, signing them up for a premium rate service. At the same time, a rogue Facebook application spreads the message virally to other Facebook users — perpetuating the scam.

Facebook users need to start thinking more carefully about messages like this that are shared by their friends, especially when asked to install an application that can access their Facebook profile. Not only are users signing up to a costly charge on their mobile phone bill, but they are also exposing their personal information and endangering their online friends.

IT

Submission + - Cloud Computing is No Threat to IT Jobs (novell.com)

rsmiller510 writes: There is a growing belief that cloud computing will lead to IT job losses, but there is no reason it has to. In fact, like many historical IT changes, it might require new skills, but not necessarily fewer bodies.

Comment We need real systems engineering here (Score 1) 1139

With automotive gasoline being responsible for more than 40% of our oil use (the single largest usage), creating a national transportation system that is energy efficient, timely, and practical to use needs to be at the top of the list.

High Speed Rail is one of the better solutions, but a national system would be an immense project, bigger than the Interstate Highway System -- and it would more than likely require nationalizing the regional railway oligarchies.

Economically feasible? No. Necessary? Absolutely.

Intel

Submission + - Lower Cost Intel Six-Core Core i7-970 Debuts (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: "Until now, if you wanted something in a six-core chip from Intel, the Core i7-980X Extreme Edition was the only flavor of the day. However, Intel just released a new 32nm Gulftown-based Core i7 six-core that is slotted for a somewhat more palatable price point. Clocked at 3.2GHz, the new Core i7-970 will afford you a bit more financial breathing room, if you're hankering for that step up to what is arguably the fastest X86 desktop chip architecture around currently. Performance-wise, the Core i7-970 keeps pace within a few percentage points of a 980X six-core chip for heavily threaded workloads. In single or lightly threaded workloads, the new chip falls in just under Core i7-975 quad-core performance."
The Internet

Submission + - MySpace gets a Facebook-style facelift (skunkpost.com)

crimeandpunishment writes: MySpace is getting a makeover. The social network site is changing its homepage....and while the site is trying to set itself apart from Facebook. the new look will make it look a little more like its now-dominant rival. The redesign is part of a broader overhaul of MySpace, which is focusing on attracting younger users. The full relaunch will come in the fall.

Submission + - Another Harmful Patent On The Horizon?

patentspottingbadge writes: In a moment of sheer horror, I noticed Apple has recently published a patent covering the conversion of JavaScript into a machine-independent representation for subsequent generation of device-specific machine code (http://www.faqs.org/patents/app/20100153929 published 06/17/2010). The patent gives the example of converting JavaScript into LLVM Intermediate Representation (IR). Although it doesn't surprise me seeing that Apple has had heavy involvement in the LLVM project (a perfect implementation technology for this purpose), does it at all strike you as yet-another-obvious-case-of-prior-art seeing discussion of using LLVM with a JavaScript frontend has been mentioned elsewhere on the Interweb? Given the ubiquity of JavaScript for general purpose scripting I can see this patent blocking some very powerful distributed computing technologies (think ubiquitous portable code submittable via a web page). Should anyone be opposing this patent before it's opposition period expires?

Submission + - $1M award for solving the world overpopulation (dicksmithpopulation.com)

creaktive writes: Armed with a suitcase full of cash and more blonde beauties than Richard Branson, businessman Dick Smith announced his Wilberforce award at the FEX Market Site in Sydney on Wednesday 11 August 2010.
The award is designed to give a one million dollar prize to anyone under 30 who can impress Dick by becoming famous through his or her ability to show leadership in communicating an alternative to our population and consumption growth-obsessed economy.

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