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Networking

Submission + - Internet growing too large for current hardware?

rkohutek writes: "There has been a very interesting discussion happening on the North American Network Operators Group (NANOG) mailling list about the scalability of today's Internet routers. A vast quantity of those routers support only 256,000 unique networks. According to the CIDR-Report, there are ~233,216 routes on the Internet, and at the current rate of 3,500 additional routes per month, we are going to be bumping into those hardware limits very quickly. Not many people are aware of the situation, and even fewer are prepared to perform the expensive upgrades. Has anybody already dealt with this and have solutions?"
AMD

Submission + - AMD Introduces SSE5 Instruction Set (amd.com)

wildsurf writes: With the introduction of SSE5, many new 128-bit instructions have been added to the existing instruction set detailed in the AMD64 Architecture Programmer's Manuals. Included are 46 base instructions that expand to 170 total instructions, enabling improved performance and reduced loads.

New instructions include:

Fused multiply accumulate (FMACxx) instructions
Integer multiply accumulate (IMAC, IMADC) instructions
Permutation and conditional move instructions
Vector compare and test instructions
Precision control, rounding, and conversion instructions

Download the full document to learn about new three-operand instructions, a new 128-bit media instruction format, and more.

Media

Submission + - "Viacom hit me for infringing my own copyright (blogspot.com) 2

Chris Knight writes: "Long story short: I ran for school board where I live this past fall and created some TV commercials including this one with a "Star Wars" theme. A few months ago VH1 grabbed the commercial from YouTube and featured it in a segment of its show "Web Junk 2.0". Neither VH1 or its parent company Viacom told me they were doing this or asked my permission to use it, but I didn't mind it if they did. It was great to see the commercial was being enjoyed by a far wider audience than I'd expected. I was honored that they chose to use it and thought that Aries Spears's commentary about it was pretty hilarious, so I posted a clip of VH1's segment on YouTube so that I could put it on my blog. This morning I got an e-mail from YouTube saying that the video has been pulled because Viacom is claiming that I'm violating its copyright. Viacom used my video without permission on their commercial television show, and now says that I am infringing on THEIR copyright for showing the clip of the work that Viacom made in violation of my own copyright! Talk about chutzpah! Needless to say, I would like to fight this: not for any kind of monetary compensation, but just for the right to employ my own self-created material per Fair Use."
Security

Submission + - Evolution: for kick-ass datamining at your desktop (linux.com)

Joe Barr writes: "H. D. Moore raved about Paterva Evolution in his talk at Black Hat/Defcon recently, so I checked it out. He was right. This cross-platform Java app is only in its second beta, but it is extremely powerful already, and designed for the easy addition of new transforms (type of mining). One example is the inclusion of WikiEdit in the latest beta. My review is live here on Linux.com."
Businesses

Submission + - Acer to acquire Gateway for $710 million (infoworld.com)

downix writes: On the way into work today, I heard about Acer buying Gateway. A bold move strategically, I wonder what consequences this will have for Gateway's employees and customers. As the purchase price was at $1.90 per share, those of us that purchased Gateway shares a few years ago are reminded just how far it has fallen.
Wine

Submission + - Wine 0.9.44 released (winehq.org)

jshriverWVU writes: "This is release 0.9.44 of Wine, a free implementation of Windows on Unix. What's new in this release: — Better heuristics for making windows managed. — Automatic detection of timezone parameters. — Improvements to the builtin WordPad. — Better signatures support in crypt32. — Still more gdiplus functions. — Lots of bug fixes."
Data Storage

Submission + - Seagate to offer solid state drives in 2008 (computerworld.com)

Lucas123 writes: "Seagate will introduce drives based on flash memory in various storage capacities across its range of products including desktop and notebook PCs, according to Sumner Lemon at IDG News Service. The drives are expected to consume less power (longer battery life), offer faster data transfer rates and be more rugged than spinning disk, which has moving parts that can be damaged from an impact."
PC Games (Games)

Submission + - Copy Protection Goes Too Far (kotaku.com) 2

Synner writes: Anti-piracy is squeezing the legitimate user once again. The new Bioshock game from 2K Studios only allows you to install the game twice, no ifs ands or buts. Even though the "Update" for the article says that 2K has replied with a solution, if you read the following forum posts, users have tried the fix and has not been confirmed to work. You might want to hurry before the thread is locked and or deleted, like so many others. This might fuel the fires of piracy, to give legitimate customers a work around until they get the official company line.
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Star Wars fan puts himself in Carbonite (thesneeze.com)

sneezesteve writes: How do you secure your nerd-cred for eternity? By acquiring a life-size replica of Han Solo in Carbonite, having Han's face removed, and replacing it with your own.

"It is made from fiberglass, and the short story is that a friend who is a special effects guy owned the piece, which was a direct casting off the original prop. He was moving, (aka getting married and yelled at) and asked me if I wanted it. I screamed a huge lispy "Yes!", and picked it up, but knew I wanted to do something cool with it. So I called my other nerdy special effects pals, and they offered to replace Harrison Ford's face with mine. I was so tired of hearing this offer in my daily life, but decided to finally consider it, so off it went.

KNB Effects in the valley took an algae mold of my entire head, then cut off Han Solo's, and replaced it with mine. They even added the frozen saliva that rushed out when Han got frozen."

Education

Submission + - Failing Our Geniuses

An anonymous reader writes: TIME is running an article on how the American school system is failing our highest achieving children.

From the article:

Any sensible culture would know what to do with Annalisee Brasil. The 14-year-old not only has the looks of a South American model but is also one of the brightest kids of her generation. When Annalisee was 3, her mother Angi Brasil noticed that she was stringing together word cards composed not simply into short phrases but into complete, grammatically correct sentences. After the girl turned 6, her mother took her for an IQ test. Annalisee found the exercises so easy that she played jokes on the testers — in one case she not only put blocks in the correct order but did it backward too. Angi doesn't want her daughter's IQ published, but it is comfortably above 145, placing the girl in the top 0.1% of the population. Annalisee is also a gifted singer: last year, although just 13, she won a regional high school competition conducted by the National Association of Teachers of Singing. Annalisee should be the star pupil at a school in her hometown of Longview, Texas. While it would be too much to ask for a smart kid to be popular too, Annalisee is witty and pretty, and it's easy to imagine she would get along well at school. But until last year, Annalisee's parents — Angi, a 53-year-old university assistant, and Marcelo, 63, who recently retired from his job at a Caterpillar dealership — couldn't find a school willing to take their daughter unless she enrolled with her age-mates. None of the schools in Longview — and even as far away as the Dallas area — were willing to let Annalisee skip more than two grades. She needed to skip at least three — she was doing sixth-grade work at age 7.
Security

Submission + - Corsair Padlock USB Drive, PIN Combination Secure (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: "Securing data is always a concern, from the enterprise application to the end user. Portable USB flash drives have become commonplace, with lots of files flying around from end user to end user, both personal and business related. Securing portable flash USB drives through software encryption is one way to handle things but there are obvious ways to breach these methods. Memory manufacturer, Corsair has just announced their line of Padlock USB flash drives that provide and alternate method of securing portable data. Got something you need to carry around but want to keep from being accessed by just anyone? Just punch in your pin number and this USB stick will lock it down."

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