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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 74 declined, 41 accepted (115 total, 35.65% accepted)

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Submission + - Disabled Britons build campaign on Twitter about disability cuts (medium.com)

eggboard writes: If you can't easily leave the house for days, or even your bed, it might be hard to help spread the word that the funds that literally allow you to stay alive and function are likely to be taken away with little recourse. Two women (among many people) in the UK use Twitter and other social media to rally people online and for rallies to explain how the Tory-led government's new testing programs for disability will drop hundreds of thousands of people who are incapable of working at all or full time. (There's some fraud, of course, but the program is designed to cut deserving and healthy alike.)

Submission + - How Role-Playing Games Arrived in Japan with Black Onyx (medium.com)

eggboard writes: Henk Rogers was a Dutchman who arrived in Japan in the 1980s following a girlfriend (later, his wife). An inveterate D&D player, he became enthralled with the NEC-8801, and nearly killed himself trying to create a D&D-like world that he released as The Black Onyx. No one initially knew what to make of it, and the game sold slowly at first. Through savvy pricing, packaging, and press attention, sales grew, and the game jumpstarted RPGs in Japan. Rogers got left behind, though, as Dragon Quest and Final Fantasy hit a local nerve better than his efforts. "I also realized that I didn’t quite understand the Japanese aesthetic and way. These games were quite different to mine, and just struck a more effective cultural chord.” Rogers went on to license Tetris to Nintendo, though, so he did just fine.

Submission + - Public libraries tinker with offering makerspaces (medium.com)

eggboard writes: Public libraries are starting to build temporary and permanent labs that let patrons experiment with new arts, crafts, and sciences, many of them associated with the maker movement. It's a way to bring this technology and training to those without the money or time to join makerspaces or buy gear themselves. It seems to extend the mission of libraries to educate, inform, and enrich, but is a seemingly rare move in the direction of teaching people to create for pleasure and professionally. Many libraries are experimenting with experimenting.

Submission + - Fixing broken links with the Internet Archive (medium.com)

eggboard writes: The Internet Archive has copies of Web pages corresponding to 378 billion URLs. It's working on several efforts, some of them quite recent, to help deter or assist with link rot, when links go bad. Through an API for developers, WordPress integration, a Chrome plug-in, and a JavaScript lookup, the Archive hopes to help people find at least the most recent copy of a missing or deleted page. More ambitiously, they instantly cache any link added to Wikipedia, and want to become integrated into browsers as a fallback rather than showing a 404 page.

Submission + - Rebutting Andreessen's Bitcoin Dreams (medium.com)

eggboard writes: Marc Andreessen wrote an essay in the New York Times that appeared today, in which he tried to make the case for Bitcoin going mainstream for payments, if not as a currency. After comparing Bitcoin to the rise of personal computers and the Internet, he tries to explain how it eliminates fraud and will solve global money transfers and the plight of the unbanked. I wrote a critique of these and other points in his essay:

Bitcoin doesn’t eliminate fraudulent transactions; it only eliminates counterfeit payments. This can, of course, save many tens or hundreds of billions of dollars a year globally and translate to more efficiency in commerce. But removing the intermediary also removes recourse outside of courts, and the cost and nature of that can’t be determined.

Submission + - Paging Dr. MacGyver: maker movement comes to medical gear (medium.com)

eggboard writes: The tools to make crafts, electronics prototypes, and cool stuff have started rapidly to turn to medical gear, especially in developing nations. The early results are quite marvelous, but there are a ton of concerns, too. The pace of change is incredibly fast:

[Many people] without any without any formal medical training—can take advantage of access to global supply chains, cutting-edge medical knowledge, and recent leaps in design and fabrication technology that have made the prototyping process faster, cheaper, and simpler than ever before. Even as concerns about safety and liability are only starting to be addressed, medical inventors and other technical tinkerers are already improving and saving lives—sometimes their own.


Submission + - Penny Arcade offers offensive, low-paying IT job with great benefits (medium.com)

eggboard writes: Penny Arcade wants to hire one IT person to do four jobs, and is looking for someone with a terrible work/life balance to be paid poorly because the company isn't money-focused. This isn't unusual for an IT job, of course, especially at a small company. But Penny Arcade rakes in millions from its webcomics, PAX conventions, games, and more, and says the job's benefits will outweigh the low salary. But did they mention you need to be able to work in an "offensive environment"? Yes, they did. Sounds perfect for the right person.

Submission + - NY Times Biffs Conference Wi-FAIL Story (wifinetnews.com)

eggboard writes: The New York Times ran a strange story that tried to explain why Wi-Fi fails when thousands of people gathered a tech event try to use a network set up by organizers. The story says Wi-Fi wasn't designed for that kind of use. I disagree, and explain why at length. The 1999 IEEE 802.11b spec might not have been designed for it, but 802.11g could handle mass numbers, and 802.11n is designed to deal with interference and large user bases.
Networking

Submission + - iPhone 4 May Have Wi-Fi Driver Fault (arstechnica.com) 1

eggboard writes: After examining the WWDC video and talking to two veteran Wi-Fi experts, it seems likely that the iPhone 4 has a Wi-Fi driver flaw that was part of the trouble in making a network connection during Steve Job's WWDC keynote. The other problem was the massive congestion caused by so many independent access points. (Congestion may have triggered the iPhone 4's troubles, too.) With mobile hotspots proliferating on phones and in portable devices like the MiFi, we're going to see more trouble in the future.
Networking

Submission + - Another Limited but Wi-Fi Exploit (wifinetnews.com)

eggboard writes: Martin Beck, who in 2008 co-wrote a paper describing a way to inject packets into a secured Wi-Fi system, is back with a more extensive exploit. His "Enhanced TKIP Michael Attacks" still doesn't allow extraction of a key, and is limited to TKIP (not AES-CCMP) WPA-protected networks. Still, he's figured out how to put in large payloads, and to extract data sent from an access point to a client--all without cracking the network key. The attack requires proximity to sniff and inject data, but it's another crack in the older key standard (TKIP) that no one with serious security interests should still use.
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Apple Slips in 450 Mbps Wi-Fi in Its Base Station (wifinetnews.com)

eggboard writes: Apple told a few reporters in briefings yesterday to look for significant changes in its two top-line base station models, which are noted in passing as "new" on the product pages: 50 percent throughput improvement and 25 percent distance bump. How did they do this? With Engadget's FCC tip about "3x3" models, I've determined that Apple now offers what seems to be the first mass-market 450 Mbps, three radio-chain Wi-Fi router. Virtually all other consumer routers max out at 300 Mbps.
Wireless Networking

Submission + - iPod Touch's 802.11n Chip for Networked Media Serv (tidbits.com)

eggboard writes: "iFixIt has discovered a Broadcom 802.11a/b/g/n chip in the latest iPod touch (32 GB and 64 GB) models that uses single-stream 802.11n. Single-stream doesn't get the full power of N, but boosts speed enough that--along with space-time block encoding, a feature coming soon to Wi-Fi access points with two or more radios--the iPod touch could be an effective networked media server, for streaming and transfer, possibly through the new iTunes Home Sharing feature."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Latest Hype on Broken WPA Is Incorrect (wifinetnews.com)

Glenn Fleishman writes: "The hullabaloo about "WPA cracked in sixty seconds" that Slashdot linked to and that's all over the Internet is entirely incorrect, and it's not what the Japanese academics claim in the paper to which everyone links. The researchers found a way, using a physical man-in-the-middle relay, to speed up last year's exploit in the TKIP key method (in WPA and WPA2) that allows a falsified packet to be sent to a client when the packet is short and contains mostly known information. ARP packets are the example. The Japanese paper is very clever, and it reduces the time to break a key 37 percent of the time to one minute, but it requires a very specific physical insertion, and it doesn't provide key recovery of the TKIP key material. It only recovers a single per-packet key used in the MIC packet integrity checksum. The recommendation to move to AES-CCMP, available only in WPA2, is a good one. But TKIP is simply not broken, nor is "WPA" broken."
Security

Submission + - Advice on When Your Laptop Is Stolen (and Before) (tidbits.com)

Glenn Fleishman writes: "David Blatner shares his unfortunately hard-won advice about what he did when his laptop was stolen without any remote recovery software installed. He had backups, a month out of date, but also had CrashPlan running, which allowed him to recover most of his missing files. The computer was never returned, but he learned quite a lot about what he could do next time. (The police did knock on the door of the last-used IP address obtained via CrashPlan, but an open Wi-Fi access point was running there, eluding pinpointing the villains.)"
Books

Submission + - Amazon Releases Kindle for iPhone Software (tidbits.com)

Glenn Fleishman writes: "Amazon has released free Kindle software for the iPhone, which provides access to the Kindle catalog of books, and any books a Kindle owner might have already purchased. The simple software has good legibility, and automatically synchronizes the currently latest-read page among any devices synchronized with the owner's Amazon.com account. It's quite simple and nifty, and suddenly makes a huge quantity of contemporary fiction and non-fiction available to read on an iPhone. It must mean Apple has no similar plans on the content side, or they wouldn't have allowed Amazon to publish this application."

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