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Comment Re:Soup cans and string (Score 1) 541

And that's where Ahmadinejad got his 60% of the vote. It might be interesting to enable the 'intellectual elite' of Iran living in the big cities to make their displeasure known to the rest of the world. But as long as they have a semblance of a democratic system, their fundies are going to run the place.

Wrong. This is a popular misconception that has been trotted out by the talking heads that the US news networks have gotten to play devil's advocate on this topic. Most of the rural poor in Iran are ethnic minorities, and have a tendency to vote overwhelmingly for the candidate which shares their ethnicity. This is why Iranian elections often result in runoff elections, as the three or four candidates which get all of the various ethnic minority votes push the two frontliners below 50%.

Television

Submission + - Comedy Central buys 26 new Futurama episodes 1

e9th writes: "TVWeek reports that 20th Century Fox TV and Comedy Central have officially struck a deal for 26 new episodes of Futurama, due to the strong ratings of its reruns and feature-length specials. Matt Groening is quoted as saying, 'We're thrilled Futurama is coming back. We now have only 25,766 episodes to make before we catch up with Bender and Fry in the year 3000.'"
Music

Submission + - Is piracy now less attractive than legal options?

utahraptor writes: "These days there are many free options for listening to music of all kinds online that are both free and legal. When I myself wish to listen to a song I usually end up at www.lala.com where I can listen to songs free one time or purchase the right to listen forever for 10 cents. The neat thing is that if your cookies happen to get cleared you start over with regards to whether or not you have had your free listen. You don't even have to sign up. If for whatever reason they don't have the song I want to hear I need look no further than www.youtube.com where I am highly likely to find whatever song I want which may or may not contain the music video as a bonus. What other free and legal methods have you found that allow you to listen to music you like with no strings attached?"
Google

Submission + - Google lottery for seats at SketchUp conference (aecnews.com)

New10k writes: "A few months before Google swooped in, the company behind SketchUp 3D CAD put on a user's conference that was wildly successful. Now Google is doing one, at the Googleplex. They won't charge a fee to attend, but because they say seats are limited, attendance is by invitation only. To get an invitation, users must sign up between now and April 30 for a lottery. Google says they will give out between 250 and 300 invitations."
Graphics

Submission + - HP say 30-bit color 'jumps off screen' (computerworld.com)

dcblogs writes: Hewlett-Packard worked with DreamWorks to develop a new display technology that uses a combination of backlit LEDs and 30-bit graphics card. It claims the colors "jumps off screen" and can accurately display what will appear on printer. It plans to eventually make it widely available in its product line. The overarching message is that once you see this display you'll never be able to look again at a 24-bit color display and feel happy about it.
Programming

Submission + - Webkit passes Acid3. (webkit.org)

ablaze writes: The latest Webkit nightlies are the first public available browser to pass Acid3. The Surfin' Safari Weblog has the news:

WebKit has become the first publicly available rendering engine to achieve 100/100 on Acid3. The final test, test 79, was a brutal torture test of SVG text rendering. [...] Indeed, we found a critical bug in the test itself that would have forced a violation of the SVG 1.1 standard to pass, so until a few hours ago it was not possible to get a valid 100/100. Acid3 test editor Ian Hickson has the details.

Handhelds

Submission + - iPhone, iPod Touch 1.1.1 Firmwares Jailbroken (engadget.com)

vertigoCiel writes: "Hackers Niacin and Dre have recently gained full read and write access to the filesystems of both the iPhone and the iPod Touch. The Jailbreak exploits a vulnerability in Safari's TIFF library to execute the necessary code when the specially crafted image is loaded. Access can then be permanently sustained by modifying the fstab file with iPhuc"
Space

Submission + - Plasma-Based Life possible? 1

An anonymous reader writes: According to Space.com, Researchers from Germany's Max Planck Institute have created a computer model demonstrating that microscopic dust-particles injected into low-temperature plasmas spontaneously self-organize into crystalline structures resembling DNA and other biological structures. Team member V.N. Tsytovich states "These complex, self-organized plasma structures exhibit all the necessary properties to qualify them as candidates for inorganic living matter."

No word yet on how this discovery might affect Human-Klingon relations.
Handhelds

Submission + - Unlock the iPhone with TurboSIM

vertigoCiel writes: A Hacker at Simbunch.com's iPhone section has outlined a method to unlock the iPhone using only software tools, the original iPhone SIM, an alternate carrier's SIM card, and an $80 tool called TurboSIM, which is capable of cloning the AT&T SIM card. The important distinction between this and other iPhone unlocking methods is that it requires less hardware, and allows you to continue to use EDGE with the new SIM card.

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