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Technology

Submission + - Superior Anode For Lithium-Ion Batteries Developed (lbl.gov)

RogerRoast writes: The anode is a critical component for storing energy in lithium-ion batteries. The Berkeley Lab (D.O.E) has designed a new kind of anode that can absorb eight times the lithium of current designs, and has maintained its greatly increased energy capacity after over a year of testing and many hundreds of charge-discharge cycles. According to the research published in Advanced Materials they used a tailored polymer that conducts electricity and binds closely to lithium-storing silicon particles, even as they expand to more than three times their volume during charging and then shrink again during discharge.
Medicine

Submission + - Virus kills breast cancer cells in laboratory (psu.edu)

An anonymous reader writes: A nondisease-causing virus kills human breast cancer cells in the laboratory, creating opportunities for potential new cancer therapies, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers who tested the virus on three different breast cancer types that represent the multiple stages of breast cancer development.

Adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV2) is a virus that regularly infects humans but causes no disease. Past studies by the same researchers show that it promotes tumor cell death in cervical cancer cells infected with human papillomavirus. Researchers used an unaltered, naturally occurring version of AAV2 on human breast cancer cells.

Cells have multiple ways of dying. If damage occurs in a healthy cell, the cell turns on production and activation of specific proteins that allow the cell to commit suicide. However, in cancer cells these death pathways often are turned off, while the proteins that allow the cell to divide and multiply are stuck in the "on" position.

One way to fight cancer is to find ways to turn on these death pathways, which is what researchers believe is happening with the AAV2 virus.

In tissue culture dishes in the laboratory, 100 percent of the cancer cells are destroyed by the virus within seven days, with the majority of the cell death proteins activated on the fifth day. In another study, a fourth breast cancer derived cell line, which is the most aggressive, required three weeks to undergo cell death.

Submission + - EA's New User Agreement Bans Lawsuits (ngohq.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Electronic Arts has updated its Terms of Service Agreement for the Origin platform. Following Sony's steps, and taking it even further, EA has added a new clause that prevents users from suing them in both class action and jury trial forms.
Cloud

Submission + - Google: Facebook Is "A Closed Walled Garden"

An anonymous reader writes: A Google executive believes that Facebook is becoming "a closed walled garden" and will soon end up like AOL and IBM: it will have to completely change its business in order to survive. Vint Cerf, Google’s chief internet evangelist and the designer of TCP/IP, warns that Facebook’s "closed" architecture means the company will eventually fail to keep up with the public’s desire for the flexibility of an open standard.
Programming

Submission + - Shen 1.7 / Qi Lisp II++ released (google.com)

raould writes: If you like advanced functional programming, this is of interest. Shen is a new version of Qi Lisp II. It is designed to support functional programming (and more) across a range of platforms. The first ones targeted are JavaScript, Scheme, and Lisp. Shen makes Qi more portable. Qi is "a language implemented on top of Common Lisp which uses sequent calculus to provide a level of type security whose scope exceeds that of conventional functional languages. Qi combines this with an environment that gives access to pattern-directed functional programming, compiler-compiler technology and logic programming via Prolog. In trials Qi programs often proved to beat hand coded Common Lisp programs both in terms of compactness (lines of code) and speed."
Cloud

Submission + - Microsoft explains cloud outage (windowsteamblog.com)

whoever57 writes: Microsoft VP for Windows Live Test and Service Engineering explains the cause of the recent outage of Microsoft's cloud services in a blog post. DNS went down because an update to the DNS settings failed and left the services with corrupt data, which they were unable to process.
Unix

Submission + - SUA deprecated in Windows 8?

An anonymous reader writes: I just tried to install Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications (SUA) on Windows 8 Preview and found that it's marked as DEPRECATED:
Subsystem for UNIX-based Applications (SUA) is a source-compatibility subsystem for compiling and running custom UNIX-based applications and scripts on a computer running Windows operating system. WARNING: SUA is deprecated starting with this release and will be completely removed in the next release. You should begin planning now to employ alternate methods for any applications, code, or usage that depend on this feature.
Graphics

Submission + - Intel GPU Driver Update Claims Performance Boost (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: "Intel has released a new graphics driver for its Sandy Bridge integrated CPUs that it claims delivers significantly improved performance in a number of game titles. In addition, the new driver purportedly fixes intermittent crashing when an HDMI monitor is connected, WebGL rendering issues in both Chrome and Firefox, and cleans up artifacts and corruption issues with Assassin's Creed, Darkspore, TES:Oblivion, Empire:Total War, F1 2010, and Starcraft 2, Battlefield: Bad Company 2, Crysis, and a number of other titles. Not to sound overly critical, of course Intel's GPU cores are far more compatible with modern games than they were just a few years ago, and performance has improved tremendously. However, if Intel wants to seriously compete with ATI and NVIDIA GPUs, it's going to have to pick up the pace."
Censorship

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Best ccTLD to avoid confiscation?

Pete McCann writes: "Given the recent spate of domain seizures by the USG, it seems that registrations in any US-hosted registry (like the gTLDs .com, .net, and .org) aren't stable places to put content that the USG might find objectionable. I am wondering, are there any ccTLD registries out there that have an open registration policy and are willing to stand up to censorship demands from the USG? There is this list of ccTLDs with open registration policies and the current MAFIAAFIRE redirection list looks very Tuvalu-heavy. Where would you register a site for maximum resistance to confiscation?"
Privacy

Submission + - Police Conduction "Operation Wardrive" (kvue.com) 1

yamamushi writes: "Since when has it been law enforcements responsibility to scan for open wireless networks, and then contact the owners of those networks warning them to close them? As far as I have been able to determine, this is the first time in the US that a law enforcement agency has attempted to do this, and although the courts have generally ruled that running an open wireless network waves your expectation of privacy, it feels like this is setting an extremely bad precedent for law enforcement going forward from here. The AustinEFF has filed an Open Records request against APD (Austin Police Department) for information on the details behind this operation, http://effaustin.org/2011/09/austin-police-department-announces-operation-wardrive/ . My primary concern is, at what point in time does your SSID give probable cause for an officer to connect to your network to conduct a search for "illegal" content? Though the EFF's concerns are more varied than my own at this point."
AMD

Submission + - Patent Troll Goes After Core PCI-Express Technolog (anandtech.com)

wasimkadak writes: The first patent (7454552) covers a “switch with transparent and non-transparent ports” while the second (7421532) refers to “switching with transparent and non-transparent ports”. Neither description really says much, but the text below suggests what they’re covering: communication via a switch between PCI Express devices. What’s really crazy is that this sounds like Internet Machines literally managed to patent a portion of PCI Express spec.

Submission + - I am now a manager, any good books?

An anonymous reader writes: This week I started my new role at a new company as a manager of a 4 developers, with senior-level plans of the team growing to 15-20 in a year or so. I've worked as a FT LAMP developer the last 10 years and have enjoyed it, frequently managing others but usually spending 75% of my time writing code. Now, writing code will take maybe 10-15% of my time, the rest will be spent in meetings and with clients and "managing". While I plan to stay "technical", this will be quite a change. Are there any books you would recommend for a developer-turned-manager?
Games

Submission + - Diablo III Beta Now Live (tekgoblin.com)

tekgoblin writes: "Today Blizzard has announced that it has begun sending invites to “chosen heroes” to beta test the highly anticipated Diablo III. Those who have opted in via their Battle.net accounts are the ones being chosen for the closed beta. While not everyone who opted in will be chosen, Blizzard does make mention that it will be providing opportunities for those who did not get an invite by giving away beta keys through promotions and giveaways."

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