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Education

Computer Games and Traditional CS Courses 173

drroman22 writes "Schools are working to put real-world relevance into computer science education by integrating video game development into traditional CS courses. Quoting: 'Many CS educators recognized and took advantage of younger generations' familiarity and interests for computer video games and integrate related contents into their introductory programming courses. Because these are the first courses students encounter, they build excitement and enthusiasm for our discipline. ... Much of this work reported resounding successes with drastically increased enrollments and student successes. Based on these results, it is well recognized that integrating computer gaming into CS1 and CS2 (CS1/2) courses, the first programming courses students encounter, is a promising strategy for recruiting and retaining potential students." While a focus on games may help stir interest, it seems as though game development studios are as yet unimpressed by most game-related college courses. To those who have taken such courses or considered hiring those who have: what has your experience been?
Privacy

Submission + - SHA-1 cracking on a budget (hackaday.com)

cloude-pottier writes: One thing that is always amazing is what people manage to pull off on absolutely minimal resources. One enterprising individual went on eBay and found boards with more than half a dozen Virtex II Pro FPGAs, nurse them back to life and build a SHA-1 cracker with two of the boards. This is an excellent example of recycling, as these were originally a part of a Thompson Grass Valley HDTV broadcast system. As a part of the project, the creator wrote tools designed to graph the relationships between components using JTAG as to make reverse engineering the organization of the FPGAs on the board more apparent. More details can be seen on the actual project page. If an individual is able to pull this off for under 500 dollars, it almost makes one wonder what resources the government has available to them to do the same thing...
Google

Submission + - Google Earth Flight Simulator (blogspot.com)

marcog123 writes: "Last week Google launched Google Sky as an addition to Google Earth. However, what they didn't tell us is that the sneaked in another key addition — a flight simulator. They appear to have held back on publicising this new feature, although it could be considered by some as more useful than Google Sky. It is currently limited to an F16 and SR22, but the selection of runways is impressive for an under-the-radar release. It's a great new addition that complements Google Earth well!"
Businesses

Submission + - Open source to define the future, says Sun's CEO (cnet.com)

An anonymous reader writes: "We're in the second wave of the Internet. The companies that will win will be those that define this next phase. Open source will define it," says Sun's CEO, Jonathan Schwartz, in this interview during LinuxWorld. Sun's Schwartz repeatedly chastises the old guard of software for focusing on monetization of every software user, and instead suggests that adoption of free software today will result in tomorrow's great software businesses. While Schwartz suggests that the perfect business model has yet to be discovered for open source, he concludes, "[I]f you don't have adoption, it won't matter what business model you use. Companies that sell open source are prioritizing community and adoption over instant monetization. We will win."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Jump in global temperature data caused by y2k bug

An anonymous reader writes: according to this article, http://www.dailytech.com/Blogger+finds+Y2K+bug+in+ NASA+Climate+Data/article8383.htm the apparent rise in global temperature has been due to a y2k bug in the data. NASA has now silently released corrected figures, and the changes are truly astounding. The warmest year on record is now 1934. 1998 (long trumpeted by the media as record-breaking) moves to second place. 1921 takes third. In fact, 5 of the 10 warmest years on record now all occur before World War II.
The Internet

Submission + - Create quick and dirty bookmarklets with a kick

An anonymous reader writes: This article includes a fully functioning bookmarklet and installation instructions you can use to highlight text on any Web page. This is a great way to combine bookmarks and scripting to create customized apps of surprising sophistication.
IBM

Submission + - IBM and Novell strengthen Linux ties

Robert writes: IBM and Novell have rekindle their long-term Linux relationships with deals to push IBM software on Novell's desktop and server operating systems among a number of announcements from both companies at Linux World. Novell may have flirted with Microsoft in recent months but its long-term commitment is to IBM, which invested $50m in Novell's as part of its $210m acquisition of SUSE Linux back in 2003.
The Internet

Submission + - Is "Social Network Fatigue" Avoidable? (socialcomputingmagazine.com)

jg21 writes: Are sites like Facebook and MySpace online "social tools," as claimed in this article just published in in Social Computing Magazine? Or are they just online rolodexes? Either way, can anyone realistically hope ever to escape them? [From the article: 'Facebook...is also the catalyst for Social Network Overload (SNO) or Fatigue (SNF) amongst those within the echo chamber, with some going so far as declaring Facebook Bankruptcy.']
The Internet

Submission + - Study: Only 1-in-5 will download video again

thefickler writes: It appears that the days of the local video store may not be numbered after all, with few consumers in the US satisfied with the videos they download from the Internet, according to a new study by Parks Associates. The study reveals that consumers are not impressed with the selection of videos available nor the price; just 16% said the selection of videos available online is good, and only 13% said video downloads are sold at a reasonable price. And what must really worry online movie distributors is that only one in five consumers plan to download videos again in the future.
The Courts

Submission + - Defendant Wins Breathalyzer Source (com.com)

Cuttlefish writes: "A Minnesota man asked for and won the source code to the Intoxilyzer 5000EN Breathalyzer that was used during his arrest on suspicion of drunk driving to help him fight the charges. "The district court found that under the contract between the state and CMI, the state owned the source code for the Intoxilyzer 5000EN." The ruling brings up interesting copyright and intellectual property questions."
Software

Submission + - Solved: Lossless Gigabit Packet Capture with Linux (washington.edu)

Corey Satten writes: "If you thought linux was inept at capturing packets because Tcpdump and WireShark drop lots of packets, think again! New software, named Gulp, can capture a gigabit/sec on ordinary/modest PC hardware running stock linux and write it all to disk dropping NO packets. The tricks, writeup, source code, manpage, limitations (and suggested enhancements to linux) are all available at http://staff.washington.edu/corey/gulp/.

As an added bonus, Gulp can capture and decapsulate Cisco's "Encapsulated Remote SPAN ports" allowing (authorized) mirroring and capturing of packets from "anywhere" on a campus network (anywhere the router can be configured to send them)."

Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Pushing OOXML Abroad (groklaw.net)

Tom Robertson writes: "Groklaw has this new report from Ausralia's standards committee, where they're debating whether or not to recommend OOXML to the ISO. So far, the same pattern has occurred in almost every country: Microsoft partners join the standards body at the last second just for that one vote, and they pressure everyone to vote "yes, with comments" because that's supposedly the same as "no, with comments" as you can find out if you compare previous reports from Switzerland, Portugal, Spain, and Denmark. It's quite instructive to compare the OOXML process to the one ODF already went through: it's not just that OOXML is being pushed through faster than ODF was, but when problems were identified in ODF they slowed down and fixed them, when problems with OOXML are identified, Microsoft simply pushes for acceptance even harder. Thus far, they haven't fixed any part of the standard, not even lineWrapLikeWord6."

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