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Submission + - Goofy to upgrade his media room

aluminumangel writes: "I'm ecstatic over the news that Disney is back to producing shorts in good-old fashioned 2D cell animation. One of the first shorts to debut this fall is Goofy in "How to Hook Up Your Home Theater." Yes, a return to the classic "how to..." series! Remember when Goofy (or multiple Goofies) would attempt a sport or pastime — with a dead-pan/throat-clearing/stuffy narrator providing instruction? It is back! We could see Goofy try to figure out 1080i vs. 1080p and component cables vs. HDMI cables... will he choose plasma or LCD? I don't know, but Goofy seems more like a LCoS guy to me. I can't wait until Goofy demos his new room! Let me venture a guess and say that Goofy will choose Blu-ray over HD-DVD."
Movies

Submission + - Jack Valenti has passed away

norminator writes: Jack Valenti, head of the MPAA for 38 years, passed away this afternoon in his home. Valenti is known among the Slashdot community as a man who did not believe in fair use, including backing up your digital media. From a Slashdot article four years ago: "In the digital world, we don't need back-ups, because a digital copy never wears out. It is timeless."
Windows

Submission + - VBootkit authors stole their code?

An anonymous reader writes: The authors of the Vista "boot-time rootkit" VBootkit had been interviewed by SecurityFocus and presented their tool as a brand-new research, but it seems they've got their inspiration elsewhere and somehow forgot to mention it. Dave Korn does a little research which points to the two-years-old BootRoot project by Derek Soeder and Ryan Permeh of eEye security.

It's transparently obvious that these self-publicising clowns have used IDA to disassemble BootRoot (Guys! Didn't you know it comes with source? How dumb are you?), and have crudely hacked out the very very clever ndis-patching backdoor payload written by Derek and Ryan and replaced it with their own crappy amateurish functionality.
Operating Systems

Submission + - The Grandma-Proof OS

mu22le writes: "Last week at linux.conf.au Andrew Tannenbaum presented his vision of an operating system that never crashes and introduced his new metric: LFs, Lifetime Failures, to describe the number of times software has crashed in a user's lifetime. More details can be found in this interview."
Security

Submission + - MS Research: EV SSL Certs Don't Prevent Phishing

An anonymous reader writes: The newly introduced Extended Validation SSL Certificates do not help users to detect phishing attacks, according to a study by Stanford University and Microsoft Research [PDF]. The study illustrates that the new Internet Explorer 7 interface, which features a green address bar to indicate EV certs, is easy for phishers to spoof. Training users does not help- those who read the IE7 documentation are more likely to classify real and phishing sites as legitimate. The authors will present their results at the Usable Security 2007 conference.

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