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Security

Submission + - ClamAV team leaves the project (markmail.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Ten years after the first release (and five years after the acquisition by Sourcefire) the ClamAV team has left the project and the company.
Is this the end of the only open source anti virus?

Databases

Submission + - MySQL has a new release model (sun.com)

datacharmer writes: "MySQL has a new release model.

Although in the surface it seemed that MySQL, the project, was not being part of the turmoil involving its community activity, internally it was changing. Slowly, but surely and in the right direction.

Today, Tomas Ulin, Director of Engineering for the MySQL Server, announces the new model during a public MySQL University session. With this change, MySQL follows the steps of other projects that have adopted a train model for their development and releases. Features are released when they are ready, and releases are not delayed because of too many bundled features. This new agile model is more open and easy for contributors."

The Media

Submission + - Iranian Missle Test Image Misses The Mark

ClockEndGooner writes: An interesting post over at the New York Times on how Sepah News, the media office for Iran's Revolutionary Guard, has apparently altered an image that has been used the world over the past two days on its latest missile tests. From the story:

"As the above illustration shows, the second missile from the right appears to be the sum of two other missiles in the image. The contours of the billowing smoke match perfectly near the ground, as well in the immediate wake of the missile. Only a small black dot in the reddish area of exhaust seems to differ from the missile to its left, though there are also some slight variations in the color of the smoke and the sky."

I find it peculiar that the Revolutionary Guard is giving false evidence, perhaps to provoke the Bush administration, as opposed to the Bush administration fabricating evidence and claims as it had done with WMDs in Iraq before invading. Let's hope calmer and rational minds prevail.
Mozilla

Firefox Download Day To Start At 1 p.m. EST 1080

boustrophedon writes "Starting at midnight in their local timezones, downloaders have been asking when Firefox 3 will be ready for Firefox Download Day, June 17, 2008. Mary announced on the Spread Firefox Forum that downloads will commence at 10 AM PST." That means 1 p.m. East Coast time, and, in Justin Mason's view, some pretty annoying times of day for many parts of the world. Reader CorinneI supplies a link to PC Magazine's (very positive) overview of the new version's features, which praises the "speedy performance, thrifty memory usage, and, in particular, the address bar that now predicts where you want to go when you start typing (what Mozilla insiders refer to as the Awesome Bar)." FF3, even in Beta and RC form, and even with the extension incompatibilities I've run into, has quickly replaced FF2 as my preferred browser — for me, the improved drop-down autocomplete behavior alone is enough to justify the switch.
Mozilla

Submission + - Firefox 3 Download DayToday (spreadfirefox.com)

mdrisser writes: "I've been eagerly awaiting the newest version of Firefox. I've been using it off and on since the first beta and now the final release day is finally here. From the Spread Firefox blog:

The Official Download Day Time Posted June 16th, 2008 by mary Hi all: Download Day starts on June 17th at 10 a.m. PDT. Check this out for local times: http://tinyurl.com/4e7fv5
Are you planning to help set the download record?"

The Internet

Submission + - Can you see web advertising? (blogspot.com)

datacharmer writes: "Can you actually see advertising? Some people are blind to ads. They filter off ads in their brain, leaving just an indistinct noise in the page, like an ink stain. This fact could be the side effect of indirect self training, triggered by continuous usage of the web. People using the web on a daily basis don't see the advertising anymore, or don't pay any attention to it. One wonders why the advertisers bother to use these techniques. And you? Do you see web advertising?"
Patents

Submission + - Redhat sued for Patent Infringement

tqft writes: "http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071011205044141
"The first ever patent infringement litigation regarding Linux. Here's the patent, for those who can look at it without risk. If in doubt, don't. "
For those who can without fear read a patent:
http://www.google.com/patents?id=3tUkAAAAEBAJ&dq=5,072,412

http://www.setexasrecord.com/news/202417-recent-copyrightpatent-infringement-cases-filed-in-u.s.-district-courts

"Plaintiffs IP Innovation and Technology Licensing Corp. claim to have the rights to U.S. Patent No. 5,072,412 for a User Interface with Multiple Workspaces for Sharing Display System Objects issued Dec. 10, 1991 along with two other similar patents.
"

Get your game faces on. Party Time."
Security

Time Running Out for Public Key Encryption 300

holy_calamity writes "Two research teams have independently made quantum computers that run the prime-number-factorising Shor's algorithm — a significant step towards breaking public key cryptography. Most of the article is sadly behind a pay-wall, but a blog post at the New Scientist site nicely explains how the algorithm works. From the blurb: 'The advent of quantum computers that can run a routine called Shor's algorithm could have profound consequences. It means the most dangerous threat posed by quantum computing - the ability to break the codes that protect our banking, business and e-commerce data - is now a step nearer reality. Adding to the worry is the fact that this feat has been performed by not one but two research groups, independently of each other. One team is led by Andrew White at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and the other by Chao-Yang Lu of the University of Science and Technology of China, in Hefei.'"
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Google Employee Hides Easter Eggs in Translator (google.com)

InvisblePinkUnicorn writes: "I was looking up information on a painting of Ivan the Terrible, and needed to translate some pages from Russian. Babelfish was working alright, but Google Translate seemed more convenient. It was then that I noticed something strange — every page translated by Google replaced one form of Ivan's Russian name with "Abraham Lincoln". For example: this brief biography. Did Google create its translation table inhouse, or outsource it from some other company? Can anyone else find similar examples of this?"
Programming

Submission + - Types of Testing / Testing Techniques : John M's B (sun.com)

johnm.266 writes: "Types of Testing ... its very common for folks in Testing, to encounter terms related to various "Types of Testing" and oftentimes, relatively new comers to Testing tend to wonder if Testing has sufficient challenges and breadth to it ... well, both as a concise one stop list of the different types of testing as well as a good reference point to begin exploring the wide & vast expanse of the Software Testing domain, i'm hopeful that this blog post could serve as a humble starting point. http://blogs.sun.com/johnmorrison/entry/types_of_t esting_testing_techniques"

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