Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Submission + - When Will Your Hard Drive Fail? (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Tech writer Andy Patrizio suffered his most catastrophic hard drive failure in 25 years of computing recently, which prompted him to delve into the questions of which hard drives fail and when. One intriguing theory behind some failure rates involve a crisis in the industry that arose from the massive 2011 floods in Thailand, home to the global hard drive industry.

Submission + - US Navy Will Pay Millions For Windows XP Support (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: More than 100,000 U.S. Navy computers still run on Windows XP, and while there's a migration plan in place, the Navy signed a $9.1 million contract with Microsoft to support those systems in the meantime. You could look at this as the US government falling behind technologically — but you could also see it as an organization that has systems that work perfectly fine for it being willing to pay for support rather than jumping too quickly into a potentially disruptive transition.

Submission + - Google Pulling Back The Veil On Its Custom-Built Data Centers

jfruh writes: In the mid-'00s, as Google scaled up its data centers to meet increasing demand, "we could not buy, for any price, a data-center network that would meet the requirements of our distributed systems," says Amin Vahdat, the company's networking technical lead. So they had to build their own software-defined networks inside what were essentially vast warehouse-sized computers. And now the company is starting to tell the world how they did it.

Submission + - The Internet Of Things Is The Password Killer We've Been Waiting For (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: You can't enter a password into an Apple Watch; the software doesn't allow it, and the UI would make doing so difficult even if it did. As we enter the brave new world of wearable and embeddable devices and omnipresent 'headless' computers, we may be seeing the end of the password as we know it. What will replace? Well, as anyone who's ever unlocked car door just by reaching for its handle with a key in their pocket knows, the answer may be the embeddable devices themselves.

Submission + - Report: Open Source Components To Blame for Massively Buggy Software

itwbennett writes: The problem isn't new, but a report released Tuesday by Sonatype, the company that manages one of the largest repositories of open-source Java components, sheds some light on poor inventory practices that are all-too-common in software development. To wit: 'Sonatype has determined that over 6 percent of the download requests from the Central Repository in 2014 were for component versions that included known vulnerabilities and the company’s review of over 1,500 applications showed that by the time they were developed and released each of them had an average of 24 severe or critical flaws inherited from their components.'

Submission + - Facebook Has A New Private Mobile Photo-Sharing App, And They Built It In C++

jfruh writes: Facebook today announced Moments, a new mobile app that uses Facebook's facial recognition technology to let you sync up photos only with friends who are in those photos with you. Somewhat unusually for a new app, the bulk of it is built in the venerable C++ language, which turned out to be easier for building a cross-platform mobile app than other more "modern" languages.

Submission + - "Right To Be Forgotten" Applies To Google.com, Not Just Google.fr

jfruh writes: Enforcement of the EU's controversial "right to be forgotten" has forced Google to remove thousands of URLs from its search index, but Europeans who wanted to find the banned links had an easy workaround — they could simply change their search engine from google.fr or google.de to google.com. But now a French court has declared that, if an IP address indicates that a user is inside the EU, even google.com searches should "forget" the offending pages.

Submission + - US Teen Pleads Guilty To Teaching ISIS About Bitcoin Via Twitter

jfruh writes: Ali Shukri Amin, a 17-year-old from Virginia, has pled guilty to charges that he aided ISIS by giving the group advice about using bitcoin. An odd and potentially troubling aspect of the charges is that this all took place in public — he Tweeted out links to an article on his blog about bitcoin and Darknet could help jihadi groups, making it difficult to say whether he was publishing information protected under free speech or was directly advising the terrorist organization.

Submission + - FCC Nixes PayPal's Forced Robocalls Plan

jfruh writes: As part of a new user agreement created in preparation for its spinoff from eBay as an independent company, PayPal told users that the only way to avoid advertising robocalls from PayPal and its 'partners' was to stop using the service. This caused something of a firestorm, and now the FCC is saying the policy may violate Federal law, which requires an explicit opt-in to receive such messages.

Submission + - So Long Voicemail, Give My Regards To the Fax Machine (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Yes, it was just a matter of time before voicemail, the old office relic, the technology The Guardian's Chitra Ramaswamy called “as pointless as a pigeon with a pager,” finally followed the fax machine into obscurity. Last week JPMorgan Chase announced it was turning off voicemail service for tens of thousands of workers (a move that CocaCola made last December). And if Bloomberg's Ramy Inocencio has the numbers right, the cost savings are significant: JPMorgan, for example, will save $3.2 million by cutting voicemail for about 136,000. As great as this sounds, David Lazarus, writing in the LA Times, warns that customer service will suffer.

Submission + - Xilinx and AMD: An Inevitable Match? (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Steve Casselman at Seeking Alpha was among the first to suggest that Xilinx should buy AMD because, among other reasons, it 'would let Xilinx get in on the x86 + FPGA fabric tsunami.' The trouble with this, however, is that 'AMD's server position is minuscule.... While x86 has 73% of the server market, Intel owns virtually all of it,' writes Andy Patrizio. At the same time, 'once Intel is in possession of the Altera product line, it will be able to cheaply produce the chip and drop the price, drastically undercutting Xilinx,' says Patrizio. And, he adds, buying AMD wouldn't give Xilinx the same sort of advantage 'since AMD is fabless.'

Submission + - Alibaba Expands Cloud Service To U.S.; Microsoft Worries About Azure In China (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: China's web retail giant Alibaba is taking on Amazon head-on in more ways than one, looking to expand its cloud services to the U.S. to compete with Amazon's AWS. Microsoft, meanwhile, has made inroads into the cloud services business in China, but is worried that tightening government regulations will strangle its business there.

Submission + - HP Will Pay $100 Million To Settle Autonomy-Related Lawsuit (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Although it 'believes the action has no merit,' HP today announced it will pay $100 million in a settlement with PGGM Vermogensbeheer B.V., the lead plaintiff in the securities class action arising from the impairment charge taken by HP following its acquisition of Autonomy. This is just the latest episode in the fallout from HP's Autonomy acquisition.

Slashdot Top Deals

"Look! There! Evil!.. pure and simple, total evil from the Eighth Dimension!" -- Buckaroo Banzai

Working...