Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Biotech

Patient "Roused From Coma" By a Magnetic Therapy 123

missb writes "Could the gentle currents from a fluctuating magnetic field be used to reverse the effects of traumatic brain injury? New Scientist reports on a patient in the US who was in a coma-like state, but can now speak very simple words after being given transcranial magnetic stimulation. This is the first time TMS has been used as a therapy to try and rouse a patient out of a coma."
Programming

C# In-Depth 499

Bergkamp10 from ComputerWorld writes "Microsoft's leader of C# development, writer of the Turbo Pascal system, and lead architect on the Delphi language, Anders Hejlsberg, reveals all there is to know on the history, inspiration, uses and future direction of one of computer programming's most widely used languages — C#. Hejlsberg also offers some insight into the upcoming version of C# (C#4) and the new language F#, as well as what lies ahead in the world of functional programming."
Communications

Is There a Linux Client Solution for Exchange 2007? 385

CrazedSanity writes "I have been working at my state job for about 7 months now, using the Exchange plugin for Evolution to check my email. Very recently the higher-ups decided to migrate to Exchange 2007, which effectively destroyed my ability to check my email through any method other than webmail (which means I have to constantly refresh/reload the webmail window). I'm sure somebody else has encountered the problem, but I'm wondering if anybody has come up with a working solution?" Note: CrazedSanity's looking for a client that will work with Exchange in a situation where replacing the Exchange install with an open-source equivalent isn't an option.

Drop-In Replacement For Exchange Now Open Source 434

Fjan11 writes "Over 150 man-years of work were added to the Open Source community today when Zarafa decided to put their successful Exchange server replacement under GPLv3. This is not just the typical mail-server-that-works-with-Outlook, it is the whole package — including 100% MAPI, web access, tasks, iCal and Activesync. (The native syncing works great with my iPhone!) Binaries and source are available for all major Linux distros."
It's funny.  Laugh.

"War On Terror" Board Game Confiscated In UK 598

An anonymous reader writes "The board game The War On Terror is a satirical game in which George Bush's 'Axis of Evil' is reduced to a spinner in the middle of the board, which determines which player is designated a terrorist state. That person then has to wear a balaclava (included in the box set) with the word 'Evil' stitched onto it. Kent police said they had confiscated the game because the balaclava 'could be used to conceal someone's identity or could be used in the course of a criminal act.' Balaclavas are freely sold all over the place in the area." Schneier has blogged this stupidity, of course.
Wii

Violent Video Gaming Comes To the Wii 263

TuringTest writes "In an attempt to bring the Wii closer to the hardcore gamer's taste, Sega is preparing to release MadWorld, a violent 'hack and slash' game. This has brought attention from family-conscious lobbies: 'The decision to release a violent game on a console which has based its reputation on family fun has shocked anti-violence pressure groups. Mediawatch-UK, Britain's longest-running pressure group campaigning for decency in TV, films and games, said MadWorld will "spoil" the Wii.' The game features black & white cel-shaded graphics, except for the blood blobs which are in brilliant red. MadWorld is announced to be released in early 2009."

Slashdot Announces Idle Section 281

For the last few months we've been beta testing Idle.slashdot.org, our offtopic humor/meme/viral video/pictures section. Like many of you, we spend most of our waking hours on-line seeking stuff to entertain our brains, but most replicators out there pick so much content that it's incredibly boring filtering through the mediocrity to find the funny. We intend to fill our idle section with a very small collection of the very best the net has to offer, making it the most efficient way to waste your time. Some of this content will make it back to the Slashdot mainpage, but much of it will be new content that we wouldn't dare soil the precious Slashdot mainpage with. We are also using it as a test bed for new functionality on Slashdot — currently the page is a reasonably dynamic/interactive experience with various voting controls and filtering options. Finally you will see occasional original content, starting with a recurring special feature today where Samzenpus shares some real tech support email from some of our most intelligent readers. We hope you will enjoy wasting a slice of your day with us, and in addition will submit content through the usual channels, but put it into the 'Idle' section so we know not to take it seriously. Now go about your day — it's mid August, so I'm sure everything you do is urgent, exciting, and oh-so-interesting.
Patents

Submission + - Patent granted for Sports photography

tanveer1979 writes: "It cannot get any stupid than this. Photocrazy has been granted a patent for shooting events photography.
The gist of the patent is
Do you shoot participants in sporting events?
Do you associate a unique identifier (such as bib number, name or time) with each image?
Do the participants find the images using a unique pre-determined identifier?
By default cameras will assign an unique image name, and the EXIF data will have unique data/time. Your clients will use either image name, or tag name(of participant) to search for photographs.

And do not think its not enforceable. Many Photo companies including Smugmug, Printroom etc., have been sued. Printroom has already caved in, and as per a response on dgrin, even smugmug has partially caved in. The settlement with printroom is posted below


Printroom user now have an option in a gallery to participate in the printroom sports license program.
Printroom paid Peter Wolf a substancial fee to license for the technology/workflow, and as part of the agreement now Printroom sellers, can select this option if they feel they fall into the area covered in Peter Wolf's license.
Printroom has three questions:
* Do you shoot participants in sporting events?
* Do you associate a unique identifier (such as bib number, name or time) with each image?
* Do the participants find the images using a unique pre-determined identifier?
If your answer is yes to all the above printroom suggests you enable the licensing within that gallery.
Any image sold will have an additional fee of $1.50 added to the end user (customer buying the a print or prints from one image). (excluding photographer orders, and ordering all images in a gallery).
Just some information I received tonight from my contact at PR."
The Internet

Submission + - Turning Flickr Images into Statues, Making Sense o (blogspot.com)

Anonymous Coward writes: "A University of Washington professor announced that he and his team are able to create 3D statues like the one pictured at right by overlaying dozens of photos from Flickr. As he said in the release, "The big breakthrough here is being able to compute very accurate 3D models from people's vacation photos." The professor came up with a software tool called Photo Tourism, which allows them to compute depth based on using the various angles that tourists have taken pictures from. As the German co-author explained, "You get multiple views from different points of a scene, and then you find the same point in different views and infer from that the depth of the object." Urine as Chemical Fingerprint: University of Liverpool scientists have discovered that female mice identify potential mates by a series of proteins in the male mice's urine. Apparently, the ladies pick their mates based on who has most recently urinated on the floor. The discovery could lead to an explanation of alpha-male behavior at frat parties. The team also came up with an excellent new acronym: MUP, or major urinary proteins. As the lead researcher put it, "Each individual has a slightly different set of proteins, allowing each animal to be easily recognised. Our results demonstrate that this protein 'barcode' allows females to identify individual males accurately.""
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Verizon Hijacking Customer DNS

Skavoovie5 writes: Starting today, Verizon has joined the ranks of pond-scum, by attempting to generate revenue from mistyped domain names. Verizon this morning enabled DNS hijacking for its broadband customers. A Verizon customer enters an invalid URL in their browser, and Verizon hijacks the session, redirecting the user's browser to a profit generating search page of absolutely no benefit, hosted at wwwz.websearch.verizon.net and wwwwz.websearch.verizon.net.

Peddling plastic surgery, weight loss gimmicks, and credit repair, the hijacking site is ever so much more hepful than a 404 not found generated by the user's browser: "Sorry, 'www.asdfasdfasdf999999.com' does not exist or is not available! Did You Mean: Asdfasdf". But of course I meant "Asdfasdf"! Thank you so much!

The search page, no better than any cybersquatter page or pharmaceutical spam, reflects that it is "powered by Yahoo Search", and generates a minimum of 6 cookies for each and every single mistyped domain that is hijacked. Each cookie expires in the year 2015.

As if this wasn't bad enough, based upon the cookies being vomitted onto users' systems, they are even using the cookies to harvest their marketing tracking information, gleaning details such as how long the victim remained on their hijack peddling page, what type of URLs the customer is mistyping, and who knows what else.

Screenshot: http://img57.imageshack.us/my.php?image=verizonhijackqf8.png

Slashdot Top Deals

Anyone can make an omelet with eggs. The trick is to make one with none.

Working...