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Education

Submission + - Should Colleges Ban Classroom Laptop Use? 1

theodp writes: If you were a college prof, think you could successfully compete for the attention of a lecture hall of Mac-packing students? CS student Carolyn blogs that a debate has sprung up on her campus about whether it is acceptable to use a laptop in class. And her school is hardly alone when it comes to struggling with appropriate in-classroom laptop use (vendor/corporate trainers would no doubt commiserate). The problem, she says, is that the OCD Facebookers aren't just devaluing their own education — there's a certain distraction factor to worry about. 'Students,' she suggests, 'should also communicate with each other more and tell their classmates when their computer use bothers them. I'll admit it, when I'm trying to pay attention to the lecture, even someone's screensaver in the row ahead of me can be a major distraction.' Try using an iPhone in a movie theater to get a taste of the quit-being-an-a**hole candor that's typically missing in the classroom.
Games

Submission + - Real-life Frogger Ends In Hospital Visit (yahoo.com) 1

BigSes writes: A 23-year old man has been hospitalized after police in South Carolina say he was hit by an SUV while playing a real-life version of the video game "Frogger." Authorities said the 23-year-old man was taken to a hospital in Anderson after he was struck Monday evening. Before he was hit, police say the man had been discussing the game with his friends. Chief Jimmy Dixon says the man yelled "go" and darted into oncoming traffic in the four-lane highway.

Has it come time to ban some of the classics before someone else goes out and breaks a few bricks with their heads after eating a large mushroom? Wait, I'm betting that has already happened.

Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Continues to Air Dorm Room Sex Ad

theodp writes: 'Forget gay or straight,' writes the Miami Herald's Leonard Pitts in the wake of the Tyler Clementi tragedy. 'How do you do that to someone? Anyone? How do you broadcast someone's moment of intimacy or private indiscretion for the world to laugh at?' You mean like this 'hilarious' Microsoft dorm room sex commercial? OK, it's behind closed doors and the girl is presumably moaning 'awesome' about Windows 7, but the continued airing during NFL games of the Windows-7-was-my-idea 'Hallway' ad — in which a college student sits locked outside of his dorm room all day and night with a DVR-equipped laptop while his roommate is inside having sex — makes one wonder if Microsoft is oblivious to current events. 'Jason gets stranded in the hallway when his roommate is "tutoring" lady friends [nudge nudge, wink wink] in their dorm room,' explains Microsoft. 'Luckily, with Windows 7, his laptop can now work like an HD DVR. So Jason can entertain himself while waiting. And waiting. Aaand waiting some more.'
Education

IBM High School To Churn Out IT Pros 34

theodp writes "This week, NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that the City University of New York and IBM are creating a computer science-focused school in the city that will span grades 9-14 (students leave with an associate's degree). Graduates who pass muster will reportedly be first in line for jobs at IBM. 'The idea is to create a new [educational] model for science, technology, engineering, and math — areas where companies are aggressively hiring,' explained IBM's Stanley Litow. 'If you look at hiring requirements, you won't see a huge amount of difference in a lot of entry-level IT jobs.' No word yet on the school colors or whether a uniform will be required. IBM is giving the city $250,000 to create the school, which might have looked pretty generous if that Zuckerberg kid hadn't upped the ante with his $100,000,000 donation."
Wine

Wine 1.2 Released 427

David Gerard writes "Stuck with that one Windows app you can't get rid of? Rejoice — Wine 1.2 is officially released! Apart from running pretty much any Windows application on Unix better than 1.0 (from 2008), major new features include 64-bit support, bi-directional text, and translation into thirty languages. And, of course, DirectX 9 is well-supported and DirectX 10 is getting better. Packages should hit the distros over the weekend, or you can get the source now."

Submission + - Power Outage Knocks Wikipedia Offline (mashable.com)

1sockchuck writes: Wikipedia was offline earlier today due to a power outage in its primary data center in Florida. This is the second time this year that Wikipedia has had downtime due to a data center power failure, following a March incident in its Amsterdam facility. Last week the Wikimedia Foundation said it will add a new U.S. data center in the coming year, saying that "ensuring high site availability" for Wikipedia is now the foundation's number one priority.

Submission + - 56,000 secret pictures in school laptop scandal (skunkpost.com)

crimeandpunishment writes: 56.000. That is the startling number in the Pennsylvania school laptop webcam scandal. The lawyer for the school district now says that's how many photographs and screen shots the district secretly captured from laptops. This week a federal judge will begin a confidential process of showing parents the images that were captured of their children.
The Military

Submission + - Remembering Mustard Gas

Hugh Pickens writes: "Deborah Blum, author of "The Poisoner’s Handbook," writes that last week the US Army announced that its excavation of an old chemical munitions dump – unfortunately located in one of Washington DC’s more elegant neighborhoods – had turned up remnants of two of the ugliest weapons developed in World War I — mustard gas and the arsenic-laced blistering agent Lewisite. Mustard gas contains concentrated sulfur which when mixed with other ingredients become a ferocious form of sulfuric acid. Technically known as a vesicant, or blistering agent, mustard gas burns on contact, through material, through leather, through skin, raising a thick layer of oozing yellow blisters, searing the eyes into crusted blindness. It was rarely instantly lethal but always excruciatingly painful. “I wish people who talk about going on with this war whatever the cost could see the soldiers suffering from mustard gas poisoning,” wrote one nurse, telling of teenage boys strapped down to their beds, fighting for breath, their voices burned away to a hoarse whisper, praying to die. All in all, more than a million soldiers were injured by the poison gases used in World War I and almost ten percent of them – some 91,000 – died. Outlawed by the Geneva Protocol of 1925, mustard gas has been used as recently as 1988 in the war between Iraq and Iran, and although most of us have forgotten just how wicked these materials can be, the discovery of the chemical dump serves "as a valuable reminder," writes Blum, "that some chemical experiments should really be left, forever, in the past.""

Submission + - How to Nurture a Computer Talented 8 Year Old 2

Grampa writes: My grandson is a seven going on 8 year old computer talent. Not only is he fascinated by the computer, but he already helped "fix" a computer issue in his second grade class. I have two questions I'd like the Slashdot community to help me answer: (1) How best to nurture his talent at such a young age? (2) How to protect him from stress injuries inherent in using the keyboard and mouse so much?

Comment In other words. (Score 1) 133

Even though quantum encryption is theoretically perfect...

Most things that are perfect *are* theoretical.

...real hardware isn't, and they exploit these flaws.

Most modern encryption isn't cracked by breaking the technology used to encrypt it. Security is only as secure as the pain tolerance of the person who knows the PIN, or the size of the visor that is suppose to hide the numbers you press from the person in line behind you.

Comment Re:Maybe for legit citizens (Score 1) 125

Getting a real ID for a deceased person might not even be all that hard. I remember when I went in to get a driver's license all they wanted was stuff I could obtain without verifying my identity independantly. The process could follow along these lines:

1. Find the name of a person that died very young and born about the same time as you.

2. Send a letter to the county health office of that person's birth requesting a copy of that person's birth certificate, as if you were that person. They don't bother to track if any of those people are now deceased and even if they do I don't think it'd be marked on the certificate, and you could claim to be a family member doing geaneology stuff or something.

3. Send a letter to Social Security requesting a number for your new identity. This could be tricky and is why you want the name of a deceased person who died very young. If they were never issued a SSN then it won't be listed as belonging to a deceased person.

4. Take your birth certificate and SSN card and get your state issued perfectly legit ID card.

The older you are the more difficult this can be since requesting a SSN for a middle aged person might raise some eyebrows. And the lack of a credit history or much of anything relating to that name could pose an issue for any kind of serious backgroud check.

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