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NASA

Submission + - Final Launch for Discovery Postponed Again

neo00 writes: NASA's latest launch delay for the space shuttle Discovery could push the spacecraft's final mission into the Christmas holiday, or even postpone it completely until February, agency officials said Wednesday. The final flight of Discovery has already been delayed by over a month due to technical and weather-related issues. As it stands, the mid-December launch window opens on Dec. 17 and runs through the Dec. 20. A Dec. 17 launch, if approved, would occur at 8:51 p.m. EST (0151 Dec. 18 GMT), NASA officials said.
Businesses

Submission + - Ballmer Sells $1.3B Worth of Microsoft Shares (bbc.co.uk)

Nethemas the Great writes: Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer is reported to have sold $1.3B worth of Microsoft shares and expects to clear 25.7 million more for a total 75 million shares by year-end. Ballmer has stated it's for tax preparation and portfolio diversification however, this major sell off will certainly fuel the growing concern that Microsoft is falling behind and failing to adapt to new trends in computing.
The Internet

Submission + - Should NPR CEO in a Glass Website Throw Stones? 1

theodp writes: Commenting on NPR's firing of Juan Williams after he remarked that he gets nervous when he sees people in Muslim garb on an airplane, NPR CEO Vivian Schiller said Williams should have kept his feelings between himself and 'his psychiatrist or his publicist.' Which is interesting, considering that NPR's own website has for years hosted stories like Worried Glances on the Flight Home ('The man across the aisle from me was dark-skinned, Arab-looking. He had an accent') and Profiling or Common Sense? ('I think it's fair to say that since 9/11, it's hard not to scrutinize your fellow passengers a shade more closely when you're on an airplane'). And an NPR News Blog item reported that 'the fear of FWA ('Flying While Arab') can make even Arabs suspicious of each other.' Williams said Friday that he believes NPR had been looking for a reason to fire him and used his comments as an excuse to do so. Williams also noted that NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg once remarked (1995 video) that if there is 'retributive justice,' former Republican North Carolina Sen. Jesse Helms or one of his grandchildren will get AIDS from a transfusion (an NPR spokeswoman said Totenberg has repeatedly apologized for her comments).

Submission + - UK to track all browsing, email, phone calls (telegraph.co.uk)

Sara Chan writes: The UK government plans to introduce legislation that will allow the police to track every phone call, email, text message and website visit made by the public. The information will include who is contacting whom, when and where and which websites are visited, but not the content of the conversations or messages. Every communications provider will be required to store the information for at least a year. Full story in The Telegraph.
Education

Submission + - How Well Will Linux Handle Future Multicores? (mit.edu)

eldavojohn writes: Multicore (think tens or hundreds of cores) will come at a price for current operating systems. A team at MIT found that as they approached 48 cores their operating system slowed down. After activating more and more cores in their simulation, a sort of memory leak occurred whereby data had to remain in memory as long as a core might need it in its calculations. But the good news is that in their paper (PDF), they showed that for at least several years Linux should be able to keep up with chip enhancements in the multicore realm. To handle multiple cores, Linux keeps a counter of which cores are working on the data. As a core starts to work on a piece of data, Linux increments the number. When the core is done, Linux decrements the number. As the core count approached 48, the amount of actual work decreased and Linux spent more time managing counters. But the team found that 'Slightly rewriting the Linux code so that each core kept a local count, which was only occasionally synchronized with those of the other cores, greatly improved the system's overall performance.' The researchers caution that as the number of cores skyrockets, operating systems will have to be completely redesigned to handle managing these cores and SMP. After reviewing the paper, one researcher is confident Linux will remain viable for five to eight years without need for a major redesign.

Comment Re:stupid (Score 1) 393

It is quite scary actually. This proves many things.

1. Flesh is not a valid software firewall. We need upgrades.
2. The human body can't fight off computer viruses with our immune system.
3. His body didn't alert him of the virus. No fever or any symptom.

4. Stupidity has no limits.

Submission + - Touch Book, dual core netbooks, or an iPad?

pjfontillas writes: With Always Innovating always innovating — in case you didn't notice there's a blinking message stating that at the beginning of the summer they will release a new product — and news of dual core netbooks on the rise should I hold off on buying a new netbook? The iPad is somewhat old news and a bit of a problem due to its restrictions but I figured it's worth a mention.

I know the Touch Book is on a different level than dual core netbooks — in terms of power, how it's used, and how the Touch Book runs on customized software and a chip that supposedly doesn't support Windows (fine by me!) — but regardless, I'm currently looking to buy one or the other.

I just want to browse the web, view and edit some documents, and occasionally stream standard — don't care for HD — video/audio, and remote desktop/SSH. I don't think any of those require a lot of processing power. The Touch Book looks like it will provide an interesting experience while supposedly lasting somewhere around 10-12 hours, while dual core netbooks should provide more power but may drain battery life.

My questions may seem specific but this topic is really quite open. I'm simply interested in what /. has to say.

Thanks for your time, everyone. I appreciate it.
Education

Most Useful OS For High-School Science Education? 434

Clayperion writes "I teach at a high school program for gifted students which emphasizes math, science, and technology. Currently we have two computer labs for the students: A new programming lab (all Dell PCs running XP, MS Visual C++, Eclipse, and SolidWorks for programming and CAD) and an old general-purpose lab (all Macs running OS X 10.3, with software ranging from some legacy OS 9 science applications to MathCad). Most of our students eventually pursue graduate degrees in science and engineering, and we would like them to have experience with the tools they will find out in industry. As we look to replace the old machines, there has been a push to switch to PCs with XP so that there is only a single platform to support. There are over 5000 machines on the district's network and the IT department is very small (fewer than 10 people), so the fewer hardware and software differences between the machines, the better. Without opening a flame war as to which one is 'better,' I'd like to know what those of you in the science and engineering fields actually use more in your labs (hardware, OS, software), so that we can decide which platform to support. It will most likely have to be either XP or OS 10.6, with very restricted permissions to students and teachers, as that is the comfort level of IT and administration, but I'll push for whatever would benefit the students the most."
Wine

Wine 1.2 Release Candidate Announced 165

An anonymous reader writes "After evolving over 15 years to get to 1.0, a mere 2 years later and Wine 1.2 is just about here. There have been many many improvements and plenty of new features added. Listing just a few (doing no justice to the complete change set): many new toolbar icons; support for alpha blending in image lists; much more complete shader assembler; support for Arabic font shaping and joining, and a number of fixes for video rendering; font anti-aliasing configuration through fontconfig; and improved handling of desktop link files. Win64 support is the milestone that marks this release. Please test your favorite applications for problems and regressions and let the Wine team know so fixes can be made before the final release. Find the release candidate here."
Wine

Submission + - Wine 1.2 release candidate announced (winehq.org)

An anonymous reader writes: After evolving over 15 years to get to 1.0, a mere 2 years later and Wine 1.2 is just about here.
There have been many many improvements and plenty of new features added. Listing just a few (doing no justice to the complete change set)
    — Many new toolbar icons.
    — Support for alpha blending in image lists.
    — Much more complete shader assembler.
    — Support for Arabic font shaping and joining.
    — A number of fixes for video rendering.
    — Font anti-aliasing configuration through fontconfig.
    — Improved handling of desktop link files.

Win64 support is the milestone that marks this release.

Please test your favorite applications for problems and regressions and let the Wine team know so fixes can be made before the final release. Find the release candidate here.

Social Networks

Submission + - Hackers Can Delete Facebook Friends (computerworld.com)

CWmike writes: A bug in Facebook's Web site lets hackers delete Facebook friends without permission. The flaw was reported on Wednesday by Steven Abbagnaro, a student at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, New York. But as of Friday morning, Pacific time, it had still not been patched, based on tests conducted by the IDG News Service on a reporter's Facebook friends list. The security researcher is not going to release the code used in his attack until after Facebook fixes the flaw, but he says that technically competent hackers could figure out how to pull off the attack. That's because Abbagnaro's code exploits the same underlying flaw that was first reported by M.J. Keith, a senior security analyst with Alert Logic. Last week, Keith discovered that Facebook's Web site was not properly checking code sent by users' browsers to ensure that they were authorized to make changes on the site. Facebook's security team has been under siege lately, with worm attacks and site flaws popping up on a regular basis. These security issues come as the social network has been hit with intense criticism for not adequately protecting users' privacy, and inappropriately sharing user data with advertisers. Users have been quitting the social network and a campaign proclaiming May 31 as Quit Facebook Day has gained some traction. According to the results a new Sophos poll, more than half of Facebook users are considering dumping the site because of privacy concerns.
Programming

Submission + - What's a good programming languange for kids? 3

chr0m4k3y writes: I was talking to my peers today about my first coding experience when I was eight. My dad got a Tandy Color Computer 2 for my big sister when she turned 15. I remember going through the book it came with twice and I got BASIC down pretty quick. I even remember messing with the graphical screen and the joystick it came with. When I got to high school I also took a computer class that also was in BASIC. Being a Computer Engineer it really helped me a lot when I went to college having that BASIC experience. Everything was pretty straight forward. Now my son is about to turn 10 and I'm thinking what language could I start teaching him so he has the same background I had back then with BASIC. But, modern programming languages like Java, C/C++, C# have too much overhead with the object oriented stuff and imports, namespaces, all the typical stuff you need to even do a 'Hello World' as compared to the 1 liner you did back in BASIC days. What's your opinion on which language could I choose to start teaching my kid so he doesn't get frustrated with all the overhead and he can do some typical 'little programs' to get him started?

Submission + - Adobe trys to slow down HTML5 3

Dupple writes: Whilst publicly supporting HTML5 and 'canvas', Adobe has put a block in place with the W3C...

Anything to keep Flash alive. A clear indication (if another was needed) that Adobe cares little for open standards (apart from psd) or user experiance.

http://ln.hixie.ch/?start=1265967771&count=1

Comment Re:The right thing to do :) (Score 1) 147

You're talking about the a different law (the one regarding export of cryptography). The relevant law in this context, regarding Syria for example, prohibits the export of US goods and technology to Syria. This includes all software products. That's why Google, Sun, Microsoft, etc have been blocking downloads in Syria for few years now. From the website of US embassy in Syria:

The most comprehensive sanction, called the Syria Accountability Act (SAA) of 2004, prohibits the export of most goods containing more than 10% U.S.-manufactured component parts to Syria.

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