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Biotech

Organ Damage In Rats From Monsanto GMO Corn 766

jenningsthecat writes "A study published in December 2009 in the International Journal of Biological Sciences found that three varieties of Monsanto genetically-modified corn caused damage to the liver, kidneys, and other organs of rats. One of the corn varieties was designed to tolerate broad-spectrum herbicides, (so-called 'Roundup-ready' corn), while the other two contain bacteria-derived proteins that have insecticide properties. The study made use of Monsanto's own raw data. Quoting from the study's 'Conclusions' section: 'Our analysis highlights that the kidneys and liver as particularly important on which to focus such research as there was a clear negative impact on the function of these organs in rats consuming GM maize varieties for just 90 days.' Given the very high prevalence of corn in processed foods, this could be a real ticking time bomb. And with food manufacturers not being required by law to declare GMO content, I think I'll do my best to avoid corn altogether. Pass the puffed rice and pour me a glass of fizzy water!"

Comment Suing Apple? Really? Ever hear of HyperCard? (Score 5, Informative) 647

You know, HyperCard? The program that in 1986 allowed you to "embed external content in a hypermedia document". Eight years before you filed this patent.

In the late 80's did a photo/video search interface in HyperCard that pulled visual content from an external database program (4D), as well as interacting with a full-text index apllication over a network running on a PC.

Hear's to hoping that Apple spanks them by filing for a re-examination of their patent.

Hardware Hacking

How To Play Poker With Your Rock Band Guitar 121

An anonymous reader writes 'Sean Lind over at PokerListings has written a really interesting piece on how to configure Rock Band (or Guitar Hero) instruments to use them as controllers for playing online poker. The instructions given in his how-to could really be used to configure the instruments for any game.' Or how about a genuine chording keyboard?

Comment Re:Another kdawson special... (Score 1) 756

This is a bad analogy, as restricting someone from addressing over 4 GB of RAM is not a legal issue.

That was my point. But the guy who wrote the article is claiming that it's some huge conspiracy.

From TFA: (emphasis mine)

It is an abuse that consumers should not have to tolerate. Someone with authority over Microsoft ought investigate whether Microsoftâ(TM)s descriptions of 32-bit Windows Vista as being incapable of using memory above 4GB are misleading or illegal.

Comment Another kdawson special... (Score 5, Insightful) 756

Why is /. greenlighting yet another article just for the sake of MS-bashing? Other posters have already pointed out the remaining process memory limits and consumer driver issues that make this a non-starter technically. Not to mention that there's not much (any?) consumer-level 32-bit hardware that has BIOS/Northbridge support for more than 4GB of RAM. Since the 64-bit versions don't cost any more, who cares?

But this guy is saying that Microsoft is doing something "illegal" because he was able to hack his system and enable PAE, even though MS charges extra for that in their server OSes. Is it "illegal" for Ford to sell me a car that's computer governed to 105 MPH even though the engine can get it up over 130? Can I complain to the FTC if I chip the car to remove the limit and then destroy the transmission?

Comment Yeah, let's do the math... (Score 3, Informative) 515

Exactly. Microwaves are allowed leak up to 5 mW/cm2 at 5 cm according to the FCC. Half that leakage (2.5mW/cm2), is almost exactly the same output as a typical wi-fi access point. Which means if he can stand next to the microwave while he nukes his burrito, he shouldn't have any issues with wi-fi.

So unless he's actually 802.11b/g sensitive, I call BS.

Comment Re:SGI 1600sw (Score 1) 370

I'm working on one right now. It's a great display, real 24-bit color, great dot pitch (110 DPI), and decent pixel response for a monitor as old as it is. They were selling for big bucks on eBay a few years ago (along with the multilink that connected them to DVI). It looks like they've dropped off though, but there are some there for around $300 including the DVI adapter. I've got one with the old SGI cube logo. It's a cool reminder of the heyday of specialized graphics boxes.
Technology (Apple)

iPhone SDK and Free Software Don't Match 304

kookjr writes "Are you planning to develop software for the iPhone? If you want to develop Free Software, Linux.com (Shares corp overlord w/ Slashdot) has a good review of the conflicts between Apple's Registered iPhone Developer Agreement and licenses like the GPL. This is important for people who may not read all the agreements they click Agree to."

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