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Submission + - Scientology on Trial in Belgium (theatlanticwire.com)

dgharmon writes: "After a years long legal battle, federal prosecutors in Belgium now believe their investigation is complete enough to charge the Church of Scientology and its leaders as a criminal organization on charges of extortion, fraud, privacy breaches, and the illegal practice of medicine .. The Belgian government won't charge Scientology for being a cult — authorities are focusing on prosecuting it as a criminal organization" ...
Games

Submission + - Zynga shuts down 10 games just in time for the New Year (techcrunch.com) 1

skade88 writes: Zynga has been struggling with financial problems for a while now. Earlier this year they had to let a good amount of employees go. Now they are shutting down 10 games.

-----------
PetVille – Shut down December 30th
Mafia Wars 2 — Shut down December 30th
FishVille – Shut down December 5th
Vampire Wars – Shut down December 5th
Treasure Isle – Shut down December 5th
Indiana Jones Adventure World – Closed to new players, shuts down January 14th
Mafia Wars Shakedown – Pulled from app stores
Forestville – Pulled from app stores
Montopia – Shut down December 21st
Mojitomo – Pulled from app stores
Word Scramble Challenge – Pulled from app stores
------------

Will you miss any of these games? Read the full story at tech crunch.

NASA

Submission + - NASA faces lack of leadership, direction, and funding for 2013 (examiner.com)

MarkWhittington writes: "With the National Research Council report that concluded that President Obama’s plan for a mission to an asteroid has no support, either inside NASA or anywhere else, the space agency faces a decision point in 2013. The NRC suggested that the administration, Congress, NASA, and other stakeholders in space exploration come to a consensus behind a new goal. But the space agency’s problems run deep, caused by a lack of direction, a lack of leadership, and a lack of funding."
EU

Submission + - European Commission's Low Attack on Open Source (computerworlduk.com)

jrepin writes: "While the UK has seen the light, the EU has actually gone backwards on open standards in recent times. The original European Interoperability Framework also required royalty-free licensing, but what was doubtless a pretty intense wave of lobbying in Brussels overturned that, and EIF v2 ended up pushing FRAND, which effectively locks out open source — the whole point of the exercise. Shamefully, some parts of the European Commission are still attacking open source."
Firefox

Submission + - Firefox ESR 17.01 is out. EOL for Firefox 10.x soon (mozilla.org)

Billly Gates writes: Firefox 17 ESR is now available for corporate IT departments, government institutions, as well as those who like a longer term more predictable version that still receives security updates and bug fixes. You can download it here. Firefox 10.x releases are on the top and the new 17.x release is on the bottom. Firefox 10.x is only supported for 6 more weeks and Mozilla will pull the plug on Feb. 12th. Now is a great time for I.T. administrators to download it and test their addons, extensions, and intranet apps to schedule deployment. Sadly, active directory support and group policies are still lacking compared to IE and even Chrome. But third party .MSIs are available as well as powershell scripts from the internet to deploy it to end users at your organizations. Firefox 17 is a significant upgrade compared to 10 as Mozilla has created a separate project to squash memory leaks with great results. Firefox 17 also offers improved GPU acceleration and smooth scroll support as well. Users with many tabs open with decent graphics card should notice the upgrade.
Science

Submission + - The Science of Successful New Year's Resolutions

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Lauren Sommer writes that changing behavior is no easy task, but Stanford Professor B.J. Fogg has developed a new technique: Don't worry about abstract goals, instead, focus on creating “tiny habits.” What’s a tiny habit? "I used to play ukulele a lot. But I stopped practicing for a while," says Fogg. "To get back into it I thought I’m going to create a tiny habit of just practicing this cord sequence. I set it right by the piano so right after I finish breakfast I go pick the ukulele up. That’s what a tiny habit is. It’s a very little thing that you sequence into your life in a place that makes sense and you work to make it automatic.” Abstract goals don’t work, when they aren’t tied to specific behaviors and to retain new behavior, it needs to be instinctual. The more you have to remember to do something, the better the chances are that you’ll talk yourself out of it. For example, instead of promising yourself to floss all your teeth every day, Fogg says to start with flossing just one tooth. Next, find a habit you already have and do your new habit immediately after the old habit. “For me and for most people, brushing your teeth is a solid habit. So that can serve as a trigger for the new behavior you want.” Then, reward yourself. “You declare victory. Like I am so awesome, I just flossed one tooth. And I know it sounds ridiculous. But I believe that when you reinforce yourself like that, your brain will say yeah, awesome, let’s do that.” Fogg, the Director of the Persuasive Tech Lab at Stanford University, says if you make the new behavior a pain, a nuisance, an obligation, or in anyway negative, then you won’t be forming a habit. "We humans are wired to avoid the negative stuff. The habit forms as quickly as you have repeated, positive associations..""
Books

Submission + - Best Advanced JavaScript Techniques Book

connorblack writes: So, you've learned the major ins and outs of JavaScript. Maybe you've even written a web app or two. But now you want to take those skills to the next level... you want to achieve that coveted ninja status. My question to you: what is the best book to expedite the journey?
Portables

Submission + - Hardware: A Wishlist for Tablets in 2013

timothy writes: For the last few years, I've been using Android tablets for various of the reasons that most casual tablet owners do: as a handy playback device for movies and music, a surprisingly decent interface for reading books, a good-enough camera for many purposes, and a communications terminal for instant messaging and video chat. I started out with a Motorola Xoom, which I still use around the house or as a music player in the car, but only started actually carrying a tablet very often when I got a Nexus 7. And while I have some high praise for the Nexus 7, its limitations are frustrating, too. I'll be more excited about a tablet when I can find one with (simultaneously) more of the features I want in one. So here's my wishlist (not exhaustive) for the ideal tablet of the future, consisting only of features that are either currently available in some relevant form (some of them even on existing tablets), or should be in the foreseeable near future; I'll be on the lookout at CES for whatever choices come closest to this dream.

Here's my current mild-fantasy feature list; if you know of better ways to meet these desires, or even more compelling features you'd like to see, I'd like to hear them.
  • Integrated GPS navigation with *built-in maps*, not relying on an (always brittle, often expensive) ongoing data connection. Even cheap standalone GPS units come loaded with maps, which means putting those maps on is possible, and (except from the standpoint of the companies who sell you data by the byte) it would be a good idea. Google's maps app provides a passable workaround, in the form of cached data, so you can load up the maps you need for a given route while you're sitting at a cheap and fast broadband connection, but in practice I'd found it iffy; sometimes the navigation refuses to recognize the maps I've loaded.

    So long as you've got a data plan you don't mind dipping into, and are within cellular coverage range, that's fine, but large stretches of the Western U.S. in particular could leave you reliant on paper maps or a really good memory. If Garmin and company can put 6 million points of interest on pocket-sized GPS devices, and has been doing so for the last decade, shouldn't tablet makers do the same? (Not that freshly updated maps with handy chunks of crowd-sourced data are a bad thing; they just shouldn't be the only option. Graceful failure is reason enough to include a basic map set by default.)
  • (Two related pipedreams: 1) Future ntegration, too, with Gallileo and Beidou — the EU and Chinese equivalents to the U.S. made GPS constellation, and 2) integration with Open Street Maps. Every tablet should be a mapping tool, not just a map reader.)
  • A full sized USB port. Two of them, even better, but I'd settle for one. USB keys are the easiest way to transmit a certain size of file, close range, in particular when that's already the medium the file occupies. Things like Dropbox help, but don't pass the Mom test (at least in my family), and require extra steps if the document / podcast / video clip is right there in your pocket, just in an unusable form. The other reason I want a full-size USB port is that as impressive it is to have a tiny computer and display in a pocketable device, there is not yet a more efficient way for a sitting person to enter text than a keyboard, and tiny tablet-focused portable keyboards are a weak tool of convenience rather than actually *good,* generally. For light travel, sure. But I'd like to pop to the coffee shop to work for a while with a 1-pound tablet and a real keyboard. Workaround: There are Bluetooth keyboards, but the only true way to get a full-size USB ports for most tablets is by picking up a dongle from Amazon or Deal Extreme, but that's both an extra part to break or lose, and a hassle that it would be nice to skip.
  • A better "swiping" keyboard. Since I can't always carry a Model M keyboard, I want a keyboard as good as the Swype version that came with my aging but once high-end Samsung phone (Galaxy S). I've tried some Swype versions intended for tablets, but they made the mistake of making the control surface bigger (I suspect to "take advantage of all that space") rather than kept it sensibly small and fast. Being able to zip my finger around quickly is exactly why the one on the phone has totally changed my view of touch keyboards. The swiping keyboard that came with the newest versions of Android is a mixed bag: it's welcome, but at least in my experience so far suffers worse accuracy than does Swype. (On the other hand, the actual included vocabulary seems broader; I've had to customize the dictionary much less often.)
  • Daylight readable screen of some kind. Pixel Qi is the obvious one right now, but there's also one from Mirasol that I've seen demoed, but which seems unlikely (sorry) to see the light of day. Except for the impressive use of the same technology in the OLPC project's XO kid-centric laptopstablet, Pixel Qi's screens have been mostly going into military and industrial displays, though, rather than into consumer tablets. There's a market waiting for daylight readable color screens!
  • Hardware toggles for cameras and all wireless capabilities. That is, anything which could betray privacy should be labeled and defeatable. Among other good reasons for this, it might make some devices more acceptable in workplaces with restrictive policies on personal technology. At the last CES, I saw a few Chinese Android tablets that had what looked from their icons like external Wi-Fi toggle switches, but wasn't able to quite confirm that with the vendors. Not every camera-equipped, Wi-Fi-equipped laptop has a physical toggle for either or both of these, but some do, and I'd pay a few more dollars for the capability.
  • HDMI out: This is common enough on recent tablets, but mostly in the form of a tiny mini-HDMI port. There are a few exceptions, but I'd like to see more. Just as with USB, I'd rather a slightly chunkier case if it means not needing a fistful of finicky cables and adapters. Being able to plug a tablet conveniently into any HDMI-equipped display would be handy; it's more compter than most of us had at all just a few years ago.
  • Decent in-built stereo recorder: Many tablets (and practically all smartphones as well as many feature phones) include a voice memo feature; that's handy, but it's a shame to waste the capabilities of the rest of the device on just that. Surprisingly good stereo recorders — included ones marketed as "business recorders," but severely overqualified — start at less than $100, and typical tablets have far more horsepower, not to mention a more flexible control surface for apps to control audio recording. In the iWorld, there are dozens of stereo input devices, as well as DI boxes for electric instruments, but not even Apple's devices come with a Just-Hit-Record stereo recording mic, which is too bad. Can you recommend any Android tablets with good built-in stereo mics, or third-party add-ons?
  • Bright LED light built in: This one, at least, is now the rule to which there are exceptions, rather than the other way 'round. It shows that sometimes the features-list game goes the right direction.
  • Alternative OS support. This isn't something I expect tablet makers to trumpet; they generally want you to run their choice of OS (whether the underlying tablet is from Apple, Microsoft, or the vast Google/Android conspiracy). But they don't have to; they just have to not make it impossible for others to do the work for them. In the last few months alone we've seen Linux (both Ubuntu for ARM and KDE Plasma Active) ported to the Nexus 7, and the Cyanogenmod developers have for years been making many handset and tablet makers' upgrade abilities look just plain silly. It's not just for novelty, either: right now, I'd like to be able to offload footage from my video camera to a tablet for uploading, which would mean I could stop carrying a laptop around quite so often. If I risk bricking my tablet by installing one of those Linux varieties, that might just be a practical option.

For now, don't think I'm ungrateful: I'm pleased and constantly amazed by how much has already been squeezed into a computer that takes less space than a trade paperback, and it's true that space trade-offs make it hard to squeeze in all the full-size ports I'd prefer. But most of these are features that exist in some form, and don't require anything to spring from the forehead of the Media Lab. I hope that by this time next year it'll be a smaller list of features I'm still looking for.

Science

Submission + - Harvard researchers fold proteins with D-Wave quantum computer (nature.com)

skade88 writes: I know this is an old story, but it seems to have flown under the wire. Harvard researchers have used a 128 qubit quantum computer to find the native confirmation of six different proteins. What does this mean if you are not knee deep in the world of bioinformatics or quantum computing? I am glad you asked! From the bioinformatics perspective this is a proof that quantum computing can be used to solve one of the most computationally complex problems facing scientist researching the protein folding problem. From a quantum computing standpoint it is the same leap forward. It is a practical test that the dream of quantum computing is coming true here and now. The actual scientific paper published at nature.com is heavy in the science of bioinformatic. Here is the press release from D-Wave, the company that made the quantum computer used in the research. It is a bit easier to read. If you are looking to learn a lot more about protein folding and bioinformatics beyond what wikipedia can teach us, the University of New Orleans has an excellent online resource I found that has many published papers on the topic.
NASA

Submission + - NASA releases new photos of Saturn's rings and clouds (space.com)

skade88 writes: Cassini launched in 1997 and has taken over 300,000 pictures of Saturn since it started orbiting the planet. The mission is due to run through 2017. NASA has released of the newest photos worth releasing snapped by Cassini. Highlights include Saturn's rings, clouds, Saturn's moon Janus and the shadow of another one of Saturn's moons Mimas.

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: What is your New Years Eve tradition? 1

skade88 writes: What does the /. community do to celebrate New Years Eve? Does your city do something cool and unique to celebrate? Do you celebrate with fireworks in front of your house or in your fav MMO (Wow... Minecraft... etc..)?
Microsoft

Submission + - Windows 8 proving less popular than Vista (kitguru.net) 5

NettiWelho writes: Data from Net Applications shows that Windows 8 is less popular than Windows Vista, the operating system that proved unpopular with the enthusiast audience.

Windows 8 usage uptake has slipped behind Vista’s in the same point in its release. Windows 8 online usage share is around 1.6% of all Windows PC’s which is less than the 2.2% share that Windows Vista commanded at the same two month mark after release.

Net Applications monitor operating system usage by recording OS version for around 40,000 sites it monitors for clients.

The slowdown for Windows 8 adoption is a bad sign for Microsoft who experienced great success with the release of Windows 7.

Data was measured up to the 22nd of December, so there is still time by the end of the month for Windows 8 to claim a higher percentage of the user base.

Technology

Submission + - Nokia's Upcoming 10.1-inch Tablet - Sneak Preview - TECHNOGIST (technogist.com)

fardeen27 writes: "The tablet market across the globe is set to get more competitive with the news that Nokia is preparing to launch a 10.1-inch Windows RT tablet appearing everywhere on the Internet. While Microsoft’s Surface was the first Windows powered tablet to enter the tablet market, Nokia is now gearing up to put up a stiff competition to the likes of iOS and Android. This piece of information is great news for tablet enthusiasts around the globe and it may catapult the beleaguered tech giant Nokia back to the podium.

Last week saw technology websites abuzz with action as rumors started pouring in about Nokia, at last, setting its plans of building a 10.1-inch Windows RT tablet in motion. The tablet which was supposed to be launched alongside other Windows 8 tablets was put on hold to make sure the Surface RT had a smooth launch. Now that the Surface has had a good welcome, it’s time Nokia ventured into the tablet market space."

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