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Submission + - Chromebooks replaced Windows laptops for these in-home pediatric nurses (citeworld.com) 1

mattydread23 writes: Here's another example of Google chipping away at Microsoft's dominance. This pediatric home care company went Google and swapped out old Windows laptops for Chromebooks. The nurses love them: They're lighter, with longer battery life, and overall easier to use. The IT department loves them too, since they have lower maintenance costs. Look for this scenario to be repeated millions of times in the next year — chipping away at Microsoft's enterprise dominance, bit by bit.

Comment Re:What drugs and what protections from failure? (Score 1) 439

It will probably be in single pill form - i.e. you can't take half of it unless you are seriously trying to screw yourself or the system.

There are commercials on the radio, and they say it could be upwards of 100 pills. I know it's a political add, but there might and I say MIGHT be some truth to it being more than 1 pill.

Transportation

Submission + - App Can Prevent Users from Texting While Driving

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Scientific American reports that while laws prohibit texting while driving in many states, many people still find it impossible to resist. Now researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are studying how software on a cell phone could analyze keystrokes to determine when that phone’s user is distracted while composing and sending text messages and combined with GPS and other data, determine when a texter is behind the wheel and shut off texting functions automatically. Such a feature could take the form of a mobile app for any phone—independent of the manufacturer, operating system and wireless service provider. The researchers programmed a cell phone to log keystroke dynamics using a common operating system as a means of determining if an individual was texting while driving, in particular, “keystroke entropy,” (pdf) when keys are struck at irregular intervals, as an indicator that the test subjects’ attention is divided between texting and driving. “The things that we are measuring, the data never needs to leave the person’s phone,” says Mike Watkins, developer of the algorithm. “But as a parent, you could require your child to have something like this on their cellphone as a way to protect them. Employers could use it as a way to mitigate their liability for accidents on work time. Even insurance companies could use it.”"
Apple

Submission + - Siri Is The New Clippy

theodp writes: In perhaps the unkindest cut of all to Apple, TechCrunch's Alexia Tsotsis likens Siri to Clippy. 'Despite whatever Samuel L. Jackson says,' writes Tsotsis, 'Siri in its current incarnation simply doesn’t work. In fact, it’s actually starting to remind us of Microsoft’s Mr.Clippy, that cloying MS Office "assistant" that would pop up upon start and say stuff like, "It looks like you’re writing a letter, can I help you?" Tsotsis adds: 'What bugs people the most about these ill-thought-out products is that they’re like that annoying person at work who’s always all, "Can I do anything to help?" when they can’t actually do anything, don’t know shit, and are actually neglecting their real job while they take the time to ask you that question.' Ouch.
China

Submission + - NSA Director Says Cybercrime is 'Greatest Transfer of Wealth in History' (threatpost.com)

Trailrunner7 writes: The general in charge of the National Security Agency on Monday said the lack of national cybersecurity leglislation is costing us big and amounting to what he believes is "the greatest transfer of wealth in history."

U.S. Army Gen. Keith B. Alexander urged politicians to stop stalling on approving a much-needed cybersecurity law — of which various versions currently are circulating in Congress. At the same time, he implored private companies to better cooperate with government agencies, many of whom remain mum because of privacy concerns.

"We can do the protection of civil liberties and privacy and cybersecurity as a nation. Not only that we can, but I believe it's something that we must do," Army Gen. Keith B. Alexander told an audience at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C.

Mozilla

Submission + - No More thunderbird??? WTF!!! (geek.com)

Am3r1cAn1nF1d3L writes: So mozilla is dropping development of Thunderbird.... WTF? I get the mobile thing or whatever but some of us use real computers too and don't want MicroCrap WinBl0z clients. Thunderbird is really the only viable alternative in my mind. Now I really have no real wiggle room to beetch cause I haven't donated any time, energy or money to the Thunderbird project BUT come on... I have been on the Netscape/Mozilla bandwagon since Communicator 4.5... never used never will use Outlook. Damn you mozilla. I ll take the Security updates, thank you but come on...
Apple

Submission + - Apple's Siri technology to integrate into Cars – Will it work? (mirolta.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Now in 2012, after driving tens of millions of people up the wall, Siri is set help drivers on the roads, by being integrated into cars. Motorists will soon be able to active Siri by tapping their steering wheel and make a hands-free call, dictate text messages or emails, and control the radio, air conditioning and sat nav.....
Canada

Submission + - Database and IP records tie election fraud to Canada's ruling Conservatives (theglobeandmail.com)

choongiri writes: Canada's election fraud scandal continues to unfold. Elections Canada just matched the IP address used to set up thousands of voter suppression robocalls to one used by a Conservative Party operative, and a comparison of call records found a perfect match between the illegal calls, and records of non-supporters in the Conservative Party's CIMS voter tracking database, as well as evidence access logs may have been tampered with. Meanwhile, legal challenges to election results are underway in seven ridings, and an online petition calling for an independent public inquiry into the crisis has amassed over 44,000 signatures. The Conservative Party still maintains their innocence, calling it a baseless smear campaign.

Comment Yeah but? (Score 4, Informative) 366

Didn't even Wozniak say that Siri isn't as good as the advertisements?

Steve quoted on various news sites:

I have a lower success rate with Siri than I do with the voice built into the Android, and that bothers me. I’ll be saying, over and over again in my car, ‘Call the Lark Creek Steak House,’ and I can’t get it done. Then I pick up my Android, say the same thing, and it’s done. [...] On the 4S I can only do that when Siri can connect over the Internet. But many times it can’t connect. I’ve never had Android come back and say, ‘I can’t connect over the Internet. [...] Plus I get navigation. Android is way ahead on that.

Submission + - Diamond particles discovered in candle flames (bbc.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes: BBC News says on 17 Aug 2011:

Candle flames contain millions of tiny diamond particles, a university professor has discovered. Dr Wuzong Zhou, of St Andrews University, found about 1.5 million diamond nanoparticles are created in a candle flame every second it burns. The diamond particles are burned away in the process.

Is this even possible, energy-wise? I mean I thought extreme temperature and pressure was required to form the diamond lattice... If a candle flame produces nano-diamonds, wouldn't several other sources of hydrocarbons produce and burn it too, during combustion? Does anyone have a reference to an article about this from the actual scientist? or is this just another hoax?

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