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Earth

Submission + - Discovery of coldest driest calmest place on Earth (spacefellowship.com)

Matt_dk writes: "The search for the best observatory site in the world has lead to the discovery of what is thought to be the coldest, driest, calmest place on Earth. No human is thought to have ever been there but it is expected to yield images of the heavens three times sharper than any ever taken from the ground. "The astronomical images taken at Ridge A should be at least three times sharper than at the best sites currently used by astronomers," says Dr Saunders. "Because the sky there is so much darker and drier, it means that a modestly-sized telescope there would be as powerful as the largest telescopes anywhere else on earth.""
Software

Submission + - Opera 10.0 released (opera.com) 2

neonsignal writes: Opera 10 has been released. It now supports rich text email, the 'turbo' Opera proxy server feature, some HTML 5 support, XML 'pretty printing', extra skinning features, and a 100/100 score in the Acid3 test. There has been no official announcement as yet.
Lord of the Rings

Submission + - Con Kolivas : back to work. (kolivas.org) 1

Anonymous Coward writes: "I was browsing around and happened upon this tasty tid-bit:
----- snip ----
"After years of using my old kernel and numerous hardware upgrades, I finally
had hardware that needed a newer kernel for drivers and to try out the newer
filesystems. Booting the mainline kernel was relatively reassuring in that
the scheduler behaviour was much better than what was in earlier kernels.
However, it didn't take long before I started being disappointed in that too"

---- snip -----
Con's back to work in some way it seems. He's got patches for a new scheduler on his site: BFS.
I haven't tried it myself. But I'm sure anything is better than the fudge of a kernel 2.6.30 is becoming.
Kernel developers need to test on older hardware: Test as in use Xorg, OpenOffice, KDE and Gnome.
It's sort of obvious they aren't. I've tested quite a few machines. Something happened back in 2.6.23 up.

All inclusive, all encompassing just doesn't cut it any more. We need different versions of the kernel.
Desktop, Server, Relic. whatever. Wake up people,."

Windows

Submission + - What happens when you get that Windows tax refund? 1

Letharion writes: "I recently encouraged my brother to ask his retailer for a Windows Tax refund. After getting past the usual "The computer and windows are sold together", Acer accepted that he should be refunded. However, they demand that in order to get a refund, he has to send his computer for "service", so that the computer can be wiped, and he will have to pay both for the shipping, and for the time it takes to wipe the drive. Since the license is never accepted in the first place, should he really have to pay for its removal? Since the serial needs to be revoked anyway, just asking for it seems like a much better way to go about it. What happened in the previous Amazon cases recently mentioned here, and do you know of other cases? This is in Sweden, and to my knowledge there are no other cases involving the refund that has come this far. Searched around trying to find a similar case but to no avail, some have tried and might have succeeded but not reported back."
The Internet

Submission + - Tech startups look to kill off IE6 (itpro.co.uk)

nk497 writes: "A group of tech startups are looking to kill off Internet Explorer 6. The aged browser is still used by over a quarter of web users, a fact No More IE6 is trying to change by urging developers to include a line of code in their sites that will advise those surfing with the old school software to upgrade to a "modern" browser."

Comment Re:Corporate culture (Score 3, Insightful) 883

I beg to differ. That myth has been perpetuated "forever", and it's always "10 years into the future". It was 10 years left 10 years ago, and it will be 10 years still in "10-20 years, your lifetime". If oil prices hadn't been at the low they are, I'd say that the myth is even deliberately upheld by oil companies to increase oil price. "We will run out of oil soon!" is at best, a grave simplification, and at it's worst, a direct lie. Google it, and at the very least you will get a more nuanced picture than "10-20" years. Or read, "The Next Millionaires", and you will get a completely different picture. (Of economics in general, compared to what I was taught in school atleast)
GameCube (Games)

Submission + - Setting up a wargame server

zeridon writes: "I am touting at the moment with setting up a Wargame server. The main idea being to educate users in risks and treats of security, research, reverse engineering and such.
Typical examples of wargame servers are the ones from Pullthe plug http://www.pulltheplug.org/wargames/

My questions are:

Can you advise on level of complexity? — i mainly intend to target medium to advanced users (but unfortunately i hardly make a distinction)
Can you advise on software to be used?
Which environment is better? virtual machines, real machines, some faked simulation?
What forensic tools to be deployed? tripwire and snort are good candidates
Should i record all the generated traffic for later analysis etc?
Have you ever stumbled on a tool/framework/general howto for realizing such service?
Ald finaly Can you propose some subject/theme? — I am kinda tempted to create something based on The Hitchikers Guide To The Galaxy but that's prety distant for the younger people (at least in my country)


And yes, please excuse me for my many questions *WINK*"

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