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Comment Re:Best low-cost CPU with half-decent GPU? (Score 1) 345

AMD A6-5400K. 3.6GHz (3.8 Turbo) and Radeon HD 7540D. $65

As others have said it is a slower processor than the intel but with faster graphics. The AMD only gets a 2100 CPU Mark (Passmark software) which is about the same as an old Phenom II X2 or a few year old Intel i3 mobile chip.

I assembled it as a low-end system for a parent that basically does email and web surfing along with some basic image editing and cheesy games.

Comment Re:Electric. (Score 1) 659

I agree that we aren't there yet for it to make financial sense for the majority, but right now it can make financial sense for a small percentage of people.

I don't really consider the Volt a true EV, it is more of a hybrid. It has all the drawbacks of a traditional ICE with some minor benefits of the electric.
To get an EV for the masses there needs to be cheaper and denser battery/energy technology. When there is an EV with 300 mile range $25K then it will become the people's car. Tesla has the right idea and may get there someday, to do it they need to scale up production 10x and increase battery density by 75% while reducing battery cost 50%.

Submission + - US College Students Still Aren't All That Interested In Computer Science (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Despite the hot job market and competitive salaries, the share of Computer Science degrees as a percentage of BA degrees has remained essentially unchanged since 1981, according to data from the National Center for Educational Statistics’ Digest of Educational Statistics. If history is any indication, it will take a cultural phenomenon to shift the percentage higher: Blogger Phil Johnson point out that there were 'two distinct peaks, one in 1985 (4.4% of U.S. college degrees) and one in 2002 (4.42%). These would represent big increases for the classes entering school in 1981 and 1998 respectively. The former year corresponds to the beginning of computers coming into the home and the release of things like MS-DOS 1.0, all of which may have increased interest in programming. The latter year was during the dot com bubble, which, no doubt, also boosted interest.'

Submission + - Disappearing text messages affecting iPhone to Android converts (tuaw.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A number of iPhone users who have since switched to Android are finding that they are unable to receive messages sent from iPhone users. The problem lies in the fact that some folks have phone numbers tied to iMessage even after leaving the iOS ecosystem.

Lifehacker EIC Adam Pash recently experienced this problem and detailed it in a post aptly titled "iMessage purgatory."

"I recently switched from an iPhone to Android, and discovered shortly thereafter that my phone number was still associated with iMessage, meaning that any time someone with an iPhone tried texting me, I'd receive nothing, and they'd get a "Delivered" receipt in their Messages app as though everything were working as expected."

Comment Re:Electric. (Score 2) 659

No, he is talking about total cost of ownership which includes fuel and maintenance. People with longish commutes are spending $80-$100 a week on gas, which can add up to $5000 a year plus a few hundred in maintenance. If you keep the car for 4 years and then sell it, the total cost of ownership is the original purchase price minus the re-sale price plus what you've spent. Or in lease terms if you are spending $300-$400 a month in fuel then you add that to your monthly lease payment to get the monthly TCO. Of course electricity isn't free either but it is an order of magnitude less. Bottom line is it can make sense if you drive enough.

Submission + - George R R Martin Reveals His Secret Weapon for Writing GOT- Wordstar

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes: Ryan Reed writes that when most Game of Thrones fans imagine George R.R. Martin writing his epic fantasy novels, they probably picture the author working on a futuristic desktop (or possibly carving his words onto massive stones like the Ten Commandments). But the truth is that Martin works on an outdated DOS machine using Eighties word processor WordStar 4.0, as he revealed during an interview on Conan. "I actually like it," says Martin. "It does everything I want a word processing program to do, and it doesn't do anything else. I don't want any help. I hate some of these modern systems where you type a lower case letter and it becomes a capital letter. I don't want a capital. If I wanted a capital, I would have typed a capital. I know how to work the shift key." “I actually have two computers," Martin continued. “I have a computer I browse the Internet with and I get my email on, and I do my taxes on. And then I have my writing computer, which is a DOS machine, not connected to the Internet."

Submission + - Brain Injury Turns Man Into Math Genius (discovery.com)

mpicpp writes: In 2002, two men savagely attacked Jason Padgett outside a karaoke bar, leaving him with a severe concussion and post-traumatic stress disorder. But the incident also turned Padgett into a mathematical genius who sees the world through the lens of geometry.

Padgett, a furniture salesman from Tacoma, Wash., who had very little interest in academics, developed the ability to visualize complex mathematical objects and physics concepts intuitively. The injury, while devastating, seems to have unlocked part of his brain that makes everything in his world appear to have a mathematical structure.

Sometimes, math can be hard ... but can it also be beautiful?

"I see shapes and angles everywhere in real life" — from the geometry of a rainbow, to the fractals in water spiraling down a drain, Padgett told Live Science. "It's just really beautiful."

Comment Re:L3, Cogent and Others Crying Wolf (Score 2) 210

ISP traffic has always been asymmetrical, 90% down, 10% up. It wasn't until peer-to-peer networking took off that the balance started to swing a little, and then the ISP's were complaining because their up-link bandwidth was getting saturated over the coax nodes.

Now that streaming video is becoming a common place thing the percentage has swung back up and we are probably 95% down, 5% up on the ISP network. They're all upgrading their last mile connections so you can have 50Mbit+ to the home, but if you're streaming from Netflix you're lucky if you get 2Mbit due to congestion at the inter-connects. We're paying these ISP's a shit-ton of money (comparatively), they should be able to maintain a respectable level of service. They've upgraded every part of their network except the part that is really important, because they think they can make a buck. And since they effectively have a monopoly the customer is being held hostage.

Bottom line is the ISP is responsible for getting the customer's traffic from point A to point B, that's what we pay for. It doesn't matter where it comes from, they should be able to adapt their network to suit the customer's needs.

Submission + - Head of MS Research on Special Projects, Google X and Win 9 (digitaltrends.com)

Velcroman1 writes: Microsoft Research finally earned some long-overdue headlines last week, when ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley reported on a “Special Projects” group that would tackle disruptive technology and ultimately Google X. Peter Lee, head of the division and its 1,100 researchers, told Digital Trends he’s not frustrated by all of that glowing press for Google’s researchers and the lack of attention for MSR. “Frustrating is not quite the right word,” Lee said, in an interview ahead of the ribbon-cutting ceremony for MSR’s New York City office. “I like Google X. The people there are good friends of mine. Astro [Teller, “Captain of Moonshots” with Google X] took classes from me at Carnegie Mellon, he’s a great guy doing great stuff. But the missions are different. We want to make things better and ship them. That will always be primary for us. It will be secondary for them.”

Submission + - OpenSSH no longer has to depend on OpenSSL (gmane.org)

ConstantineM writes: What has been planned for a long time now, prior to the infamous heartbleed fiasco of OpenSSL (which does not affect SSH at all), is now officially a reality — with the help of some recently adopted crypto from DJ Bernstein, OpenSSH now finally has a compile-time option to no longer depend on OpenSSL — `make OPENSSL=no` has now been introduced for a reduced configuration OpenSSH to be built without OpenSSL, which would leave you with no legacy SSH-1 baggage at all, and on the SSH-2 front with only AES-CTR and chacha20+poly1305 ciphers, ECDH/curve25519 key exchange and Ed25519 public keys.

Submission + - Rent-a-cops delete photographer's memory card because of because we say so (youtube.com)

sandbagger writes: Chicago-based photographer Benn Jordan that shows the scary situation he found himself in recently while trying to capture a time-lapse of South Chicago. Security guards who refused to identify themselves, asked him to move from the area between the sidewalk and private property they protect, then confiscated his memory cards and deleted days of work. The Acme Refining guards' reasons and legal authority to do so seem to be 'because we say so.'

Submission + - Samsung Can't Seek Patent Injunctions in European Courts for Five Years (eetimes.com)

An anonymous reader writes: There are about 4,300 technology patents used in the mobile industry that are considered "essential" for any smartphone or tablet to work with GSM (2G) and UMTS (3G) networks. Those patents are the property of a handful of companies, among them Apple, Google, Samsung, Motorola, and Microsoft, and give their owners substantial power in the market. But, as Almunia pointed out, they "can be used abusively."

To address the Commission's concerns, Samsung has for a period of five years committed not to seek any injunctions in the European Economic Area (EEA) on the basis of any of its Standard-Essential-Patents (SEPs), present and future, that relate to technologies implemented in smartphones and tablets against any company that agrees to a particular framework for licensing the relevant SEPs.

Submission + - Researchers Find Easy to Exploit Bugs in Traffic Control Systems

Trailrunner7 writes: It has been a running joke in the tech industry for years that the hacking scenes in movies are, well, a joke. Hackers in hoodies pushing a few keys and taking down the power grid or causing massive traffic pileups by turning all the stoplights green at once. While those scenes provide endless entertainment for security folks, it turns out some of those attacks aren’t so far-fetched.

Cesar Cerrudo, a researcher and CTO at IOActive, decided to take a look at the security of some of the devices that control traffic lights and electronic signs in many cites around the world, and found that not only were the devices vulnerable to a number of attacks, but they could be exploited quite easily and perhaps could be used to spread malware from device to device. Cerrudo said that the vulnerabilities he identified can be exploited from up to a mile or two away with the right equipment.

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