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Windows

Submission + - Gaming Post-Vista: Myths and Realities

Ant writes: "This Ten Ton Hammer article answers personal computer/PC gamers' question on what's coming their way with Microsoft's newest operating system/OS, Windows Vista. With the PC primed to be the primary distribution platform for gaming categories (like Massive Multiplayer Online Role Playing games/MMORPGs in particular) for many years to come, it's important to know exactly what we're getting into when Vista rolls out worldwide on January 30, 2007. Jeff "Ethec" Woleslagle offers a quick, non-technical rebuttal to several of the more ambitious PC gaming rumors cropping up around the internet. Seen on Blue's News."
PHP

Submission + - Scientists regrow chicken wing

An anonymous reader writes: Unlike salamanders and lizards, most animals have lost the ability to replace missing limbs. But a research team in San Diego has been able to regenerate a wing in a chick embryo — a species not known to be able to regrow limbs — suggesting the potential for such regeneration exists innately in all vertebrates, including humans.
PC Games (Games)

Submission + - WoW: Burning Crusade or Banning Jihad?

Trashbringer writes: As a follow up to an earlier story, apparently it was not Blizzard's intent to ban World of Warcraft players specifically for running the client on Linux . Linux users are just a few among those whose accounts have been erroneously closed along side those of actual botters and hackers. So far Blizzard hasn't confessed they've mistakenly banned anyone. To make matters worse, Blizzard doesn't have a telephone number to contact them if you were banned, nor can banned players post in their support forums! Currently, the only option is to email them and wait an unspecified amount of time for a response. How's that for customer service?
Sci-Fi

Submission + - Shatner Says Abrams Wants Him and Nimoy in Trek XI

Blue Fox USA writes: "From TrekMovie.com: "William Shatner appeared at a couple of Trek conventions over the weekend and gave some more details from his conversations with Star Trek XI Producer J.J. Abrams. According to TrekWeb, Shatner again confirmed that the characters of Kirk and Spock would be in the film, telling the crowd in Springfield, MA that "I had a talk with J.J. Abrams a while ago and they were writing a new script — and we are all hoping it will be wonderful...and he said, they were going to get the Kirk and Spock characters in there." The next day Shatner was in New York where Doug Wilson of TrekCore.com reports Shatner as saying "J.J. [Abrams] is committed to having Leonard and I, Leonard and me, in the film." Shatner also suggested that Abrams would be looking at unkowns for the roles of the younger Kirk and Spock.""
Communications

Submission + - Ads to get put on cell phones

An anonymous reader writes: It's bad enough that commercials are being served up online, on radio and on TV, now Yahoo! has done a deal in the UK with Vodafone to put them on cell phones. The advantage of this according to Nick Read, chief executive of Vodafone UK, is that "customers who choose to receive targeted messages get better value, as well as a richer mobile experience." I'm no expert in the field but surely getting ads on your cell phone doesn't make for a 'richer mobile experience'.
AMD/OSTG

Journal Journal: AMD achieves target of 15% Notebook CPU Market Share

Last year, AMD set a goal of sharing 15% of total Notebook CPU market . In the first three quarters of 2006, AMD has shipped 2.85M Notebook CPUs, achieving their goal. "In the value market, the most common products are AMD Turion 64 and budget 32 bit Semperon processors. While in the mainstream market, Turion 64x2 formed the flagship range. By the advance of technology, pricing of mobile computer has reached a lowest point and
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Beyond 3G: Practical Cellular Internet Access

PreacherTom writes: For years 3G, or "third generation," denoted some future wireless utopia where voice, data, and video would all merge into a wondrous amalgam, marked by snazzy phones that do everything perfectly — and fast. There is indeed a new wireless utopia, and again, it's about merging voice, data, and all the other stuff at even faster speeds. It is known as High-Speed Downlink Packet Access, or HSDPA, and it has started appearing on wireless networks operated by companies such as Vodaphone in Europe and Cingular Wireless in the U.S. Meanwhile, South Korea's Samsung has even started building HSDPA-ready phones. The technology promises wireless speeds as high as 3.6 Mbps but in practice will be much slower than that — fast enough, though, to make wirelessly surfing the Web and downloading music and video well worth the effort.
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Dodging the IRS...Online

PreacherTom writes: Once upon a time, the term "money laundering" brought pictures of Big Al, bookkeepers, and prohibition to mind. Still, like everything else, it has come into the age of technology. A new report filed by the Financial Action Task Force — an international organization based in France that develops recommendations for combating money laundering and terrorism financing — details just how pervasive online money laundering has become and gives details on this multi-billion dollar criminal industry.
Google

Submission + - Google Goes Offline

PreacherTom writes: Google is rolling out its most ambitious print advertising initiative yet, an online marketplace that will let advertisers place bids on space in more than 50 major newspapers across the U.S. The search giant will launch an alpha test of Google Print Ads this week. Since last fall, Google has tried at least three small-scale experiments with placing print ads in newspapers and magazines with mixed success. This, though, is the first full-scale effort. "It might start changing the way we do certain things," says Peter Gardiner, chief media officer for New York agency Deutsch. "But the whole world is changing right now."

Conducting an International Job Search? 34

An anonymous reader asks: "Ask Slashdot recently did a question about leaving America for someplace else, and that got me thinking — for those that left, how did you get started? After you had picked your destination country, did you just hop on a plane and look from there, if so how much money did you keep in reserve? Did you find the job before you went? What is the best site to look at for international job postings?"
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Embraces Open Source

Gunny writes: "In a joint letter to the Open Source Community, Microsoft and Novell announced that they would be directly collaborating together on open source projects, namely the use of mixed Linux/Windows IT solutions. From the article:

Why is Microsoft doing this? Because they recognize that customers today are deploying mixed source solutions — Windows and Linux — and they want these solutions to work well together. This will help Microsoft by making it easier for Linux customers to deploy Windows in their Linux environments. Microsoft is committing significant resources to promote joint Windows-Linux solutions. This is all about co-existence and giving customers greater choice.

More importantly, Microsoft has pledged not to assert its patents against individual, non-commercial open source developers, as part of it's agreement with Novell. Microsoft will recommend SUSE Enterprise Linux to it's customers who want Linux solutions."
Mozilla

Submission + - Is Firefox/Google Spying on Your News Feeds?

El Lobo writes: From
http://legroom.net/modules.php?op=modload&name=New s&file=article&sid=215&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0
So, I have Firefox installed and configured, and I begin testing out the new RSS features. The first time I hit a feed (in this case, my own LegRoom.net feed) I was prompted to accept a cookie from fusion.google.com. I didn't think much of it at first and instinctively denied it, but then I noticed the same prompt after a reinstall, and then again on each other feed I visited. This was clearly being triggered by Firefox itself and not by the feed website. I couldn't find any explanation for this behavior, so at this point I did what any good little geek would do: I fired up a copy of Wireshark (formerly Ethereal) and started sniffing network traffic. After a bit of analysis, I found that immediately after every feed page is loaded, Firefox makes call to Google.

HP Acquires VoodooPC 32

eldavojohn writes "HP has acquired VoodooPC, a high-end gaming PC provider who's former co-owner will now be the chief technologist of HP's newly formed gaming PC division. Back in May, we saw Dell acquire Alienware. Are gaming machines important options to consumers, or is it just plain profitable? Who will we see enter the gaming market next? Apple?"
Spam

Submission + - GOP.com sends unsolicated bulk email

An anonymous reader writes: I have an email address associated with my cell phone that I'm very careful who I give to. So, I was suprised when I got an email from Ken Mahlman, Chairman of the Republican National Committee. What surprised me even more is how many aspects about the email are similar to spam that I get. It comes from a gop.com email address, but there is no MX record(s) and the smtp port for the single host listed is currently unaccessable. The email states to watch a video and then email it to 5 friends. The email only provides a URL to opt-out (which I can't use on my current cell phone). And while the website privacy policy does include an opt-out email address, it is never provided in their email and since it is also a gop.com email address it has the same problems stated above for getting through to them. Best of all, under the CAN-SPAM act of 2003, they don't need to honor my opt-out request until after the election is already over! I am so looking forward to when my inbox gets filled with unsolicated messages from both parties every November since under the same law an opt-out request to gop.com does not include opting out from gop2007.com, gop2008.com, etc.

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