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Nintendo

Submission + - Nintendo 3DS vs. Apple iPad 2: who will win? (arnnet.com.au)

An anonymous reader writes: Both hardware vendors are headed straight towards a head-to-head battle for space in the carry bag – it might be difficult to imagine the typical person carrying both around on a daily basis, and with Apple showing a great deal more interest in the gaming market (it launched Game Center just last year), it will be competing with Nintendo for space in the public transport commuter’s bag, as well as those $$$s that are spent on time eating games and entertainment.
News

Submission + - Doomsday Bunkers sales skyrocket up to 1000% in th (heaven4geeks.com)

kingkaos69 writes: Apparently after the devastating earthquake that hit Japan a few weeks ago and the subsequent Fukushima nuclear accident, the fears of a nuclear meltdown run rampant. Why you ask? Well, according to CNNMoney, most U.S. companies selling doomsday bunkers are seeing sales skyrocket anywhere from 20% to 1,000%...
Android

Submission + - Apple Reveals iOS Safari Is Crippled For Devs (thinq.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes: Apple has hit back over claims that the browser shipped with its iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad devices is significantly slower than Android's equivalent, calling the independent testing 'flawed'. "They didn't actually test the Safari browser on the iPhone," Apple's Kerris argues. "Instead they only tested their own proprietary app, which uses an embedded Web viewer that doesn't actually take advantage of Safari's Web performance optimisations." This, claims testing firm Blaze.io, is news to the world. "Embedded browsers are expected to behave, for the most part, the same as the regular browser," the company stated, defending its methodology. "However, Apple is now stating that their embedded browser, called UIWebView, does not share the same optimisations MobileSafari does.
Books

Submission + - Age of the E-Book Upon is Upon Us (komonews.com)

The Installer writes: To no one's great surprise, January saw a huge spike in e-book sales. Undoubtedly due to all those lucky folks who got a Kindle(or other e-reader) for the holidays.

From the Article:

The e-book boom has reached new heights, but not high enough to boost book sales overall.

Helped by millions of Kindles, Nooks and other digital devices given for holiday gifts, e-book sales jumped in January and surpassed purchases of hardcovers and mass market paperbacks, according to a new survey. The Association of American Publishers reported Thursday that e-sales more than doubled from $32.4 million in January 2010 to $69.9 million in January 2011.

Hardcovers sales fell from $55.4 million to $49.1 million, and mass market paperbacks, a format that's declining as baby boomers seek books with larger print, fell from $56.4 million to $39 million.

Total sales, which include the education and professional markets, were $805.7 million in January, slightly below the $821.5 million reported last year.

Technology

Submission + - 'Pruned' Microchips Twice as Fast and Efficient (gizmag.com)

Zothecula writes: If you had to use a commuting bicycle in a race, you would probably set about removing the kickstand, fenders, racks and lights to make the thing as fast and efficient as possible. When engineers at Houston's Rice University are developing small, fast, energy-efficient chips for use in devices like hearing aids, it turns out they do pretty much the same thing. The removal of portions of circuits that aren't essential to the task at hand is known as "probabilistic pruning," and it results in chips that are twice as fast, use half the power, and are half the size of conventional chips.
Programming

Are Quirky Developers Brilliant Or Dangerous? 1134

jammag writes "Most developers have worked with a dude like Josh, who's so brilliant the management fawns over him even as he takes a dump in the lobby flowerpot. Eric Spiegel tells of one such Josh, who wears T-shirts with offensive slogans, insults female co-workers and, when asked about documentation, smirks, "What documentation?' Sure, he was whipsmart and could churn out code that saved the company millions, but can we please stop enabling these people?"
Data Storage

Researchers Create Graphite Memory 10 Atoms Thick 135

CWmike writes "Researchers at Rice University have demonstrated a new data storage medium made out of a layer of graphite only 10 atoms thick. The technology could potentially provide many times the capacity of current flash memory and withstand temperatures of 200 degrees Celsius and radiation that would make solid-state disk memory disintegrate. 'Though we grow it from the vapor phase, this material [graphene] is just like graphite in a pencil. You slide these right off the end of your pencil onto paper. If you were to place Scotch tape over it and pull up, you can sometimes pull up as small as one sheet of graphene. It is a little under 1 nanometer thick,' Professor James Tour said."
The Courts

Apple Believes Someone Is Behind Psystar 606

rgraham writes "From the article on Growler: 'Apple apparently believes that somebody else is behind Psystar, which might help to explain why a major law firm would take on what seems like a fly-by-night's case; also why Psystar has been so bold in continuing to sell its products. I knew this thing felt funny. As Alice in Wonderland might put it, "It gets interestinger and interestinger."'"
Medicine

Brains Work Best At Age of 39 267

Scientists at the University of California Los Angeles are reporting that while some people may think "life begins at 40," all it seems to do is slow down. According to recent research, at age 39 our brain reaches its peak speed, and it's all downhill after that. "The loss of a fatty skin that coats the nerve cells, called neurons, during middle age causes the slowdown, experts say. The coating acts as insulation, similar to the plastic covering on an electrical cable, and allows for fast bursts of signals around the body and brain. When the sheath deteriorates, signals passing along the neurons in the brain slow down. This means reaction times in the body are slower too."
Businesses

Should You Break TOS Because Work Asks You? 680

An anonymous reader writes "My boss recently assigned me a project that was all his idea, with two basic flaws that would require me to break multiple web sites' Terms of Service (TOS). Part requires scraping most of the site, parsing the data and presenting it as our own without human intervention. While we're safe on copyright issues, clearly scraping like this is normally not allowed. At times it might also put a load on those sites. The other is, for lack of better words, a 'load balancing' part that requires using multiple free accounts instead of purchasing space and CPU time for less than $2,000 USD per month. The boss sees it as 'distributed' computing when in reality it's 'parasitic.' My question is: am I wrong about the ethics? If I do need to walk, how best can I handle it without damaging my reputation and future employment opportunities?"
Privacy

Gov't Computers Used to Find Info on "Joe the Plumber" 793

After Joe Wurzelbacher of Ohio gained fame as "Joe the Plumber" in the course of the current presidential campaign, it seems that he's drawn more than idle curiosity from people with access to what should probably be confidential information. An anonymous reader writes with a story from The Columbus Dispatch that "government insiders accessed Joe the Plumber's records soon after the McCain-Obama debate. 'Public records requested by The Dispatch disclose that information on Wurzelbacher's driver's license or his sport-utility vehicle was pulled from the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles database three times shortly after the debate. Information on Wurzelbacher was accessed by accounts assigned to the office of Ohio Attorney General Nancy H. Rogers, the Cuyahoga County Child Support Enforcement Agency and the Toledo Police Department.' Welcome to 1984."
Science

CO2 To Fuel, Closing the "Carbon Loop" 316

leprasmurf writes "Inhabitat has posted an article detailing a recent announcement of a process to turn CO2 into fuel. The process, which used to be considered too energy inefficient, uses a multi-step, low pressure, and low temperature biocatalyst to break the CO2 into 'basic hydrocarbon building blocks.'"
Businesses

Submission + - Print-On Solar Panels: Innovation of the Year (nanosolar.com)

nweaver writes: "Popular Science Magazine has announced its Innovation of the year, which are Nano Solar's Print on Solar Cells. Unlike conventional solar cells, these are printed onto sheets of flexible aluminum, with the company claiming a cost of $.30/W for solar cells. Nano Solar's Factory for producing mile long rolls of solar cells is almost online. The potential is staggering. Even assuming that the completed cells, in a household system, cost $2000/kW to produce, this will easily undercut electricity as even at just $.10/kwh and producing for just 8 hours per day and 300 days in a year, a solar installation with such cells would have a 12%/year return on investment. We may be only a few years away from the Solar Age."

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