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Patents

HP Patents Bignum Implementation From 1912 144

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "The authors of GMP (the GNU Multiple Precision Arithmetic Library) were invited to join Peer-to-Patent to review HP's recent patent on a very old technique for implementing bignums because their software might infringe. Basically, HP's patent claims choosing an exponent based on processor word size. If you choose a 4-bit word size and a binary number, you end up working in hexadecimal. Or for a computer with a 16-bit word and a base-10 number, you use base 10,000 so that each digit of the base-10,000 number would fit into a single 16-bit word. The obvious problem with that is that there's plenty of prior art here. Someone who spent a few minutes Googling found that Knuth describing the idea in TAOCP Vol. 2 and other citations go back to 1912 (which implemented the same algorithm using strips of cardboard and a calculating machine). None of this can be found in the 'references cited' section. Even though the patent examiner did add a couple of references, they appear to have cited some old patents. The patent issued a few months ago was filed back in October of 2004, and collected dust at the USPTO for some 834 days."
Censorship

Craigslist Blocks Yahoo Pipes 164

Romy Maxwell posted a blog piece on Craigslist apparently shutting off access to Yahoo Pipes. Maxwell was working on a project, one of 2,111 using Craigslist as a data source, for a (non-commercial) Pipes-based mashup. He sent Craig Newmark an invitation to the alpha test, after a few rounds of friendly communication — "...as a rule of thumb, okay to use RSS feeds for noncommercial purposes." The apparent response, 4 days later, was for Craigslist to redirect any request with an HTTP referrer of pipes.yahoo.com to the Craigslist home page. Maxwell writes: "It's a sad day for me. I'm not too upset about my own project, as Flippity was already removing Craigslist as a data source. With the likes of eBay and Oodle not only providing open APIs but encouraging and rewarding developers, spending my time wrestling with Craigslist is just plain stupid and exhausting. I'm sure I'm not the only person to have come to that conclusion, and I wish it were different. ... If Craigslist wants to keep its doors shut to the world, so be it."
Idle

Canadian Blood Services Promotes Pseudoscience 219

trianglecat writes "The not-for-profit agency Canadian Blood Services has a section of their website based on the Japanese cultural belief of ketsueki-gata, which claims that a person's blood group determines or predicts their personality type. Disappointing for a self-proclaimed 'science-based' organization. The Ottawa Skeptics, based in the nation's capital, appear to be taking some action."

Comment Re:Did no one read the fine summary? (Score 1) 305

Tarsnap is really designed as a backup service rather than a synchronization service: While it is very good at recognizing duplicate data and only uploading new blocks when you create an archive, it has no such mechanism for making archive extraction more efficient -- I wrote it with the presumption that people would only be extracting archives after losing data. That said, I think I can see a way to implement "tarsnap -x --sync" efficiently.

But for right now, as much as I'd love to get more customers, I don't think Tarsnap really matches the submitter's requirements.

Comment Bing replaces Live Search (Score 1) 1

Bing is, in essence a relaunch of the MSN Search / Windows Live Search / Live Search; Wikipedia says that Live Search was discontinued on 21st May this year, redirecting from then to Bing.

Hence Bing becomes the built-in search for many old browsers in Windows land. Some default market share is expected. What would be interesting is how the expectation stacks up against the new data.

Submission + - The world's most polite dustbin (newlaunches.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Thanks to the recent efforts of today's youth, and particularly of a few students from the Industrial Design Centre (IDC) at IIT-Bombay, one rather unique solution to keeping rubbish off the city streets has been put forth. The students have designed and developed a dustbin they've called 'Sustain-o-bin'(TM). It's equipped with sensors that can detect the proximity of people and automatically wheel itself in the direction of those closest. To further scare the bejeebers out of them, this interactive bin is even designed to request people to use it. Once you’ve used it, it'(TM)s also programmed to be polite enough to say 'Thank you'(TM) and be on it’s merry way. What makes the bin economical as well as eco-friendly is the fact that it's entirely made up of waste material.
Science

Submission + - Robot video - way cool (examiner.com)

An anonymous reader writes: This robot was developed by Boston Dynamics to test chemical protective clothing for the United States Army.

The robot has a range of motion that is astounding

Submission + - Bing - Now Featuring (thetechnologycafe.com) 1

samzbest writes: Just yesterday we talked about Microsoft Bing gaining 10% market share in the US, after it’s release five months ago.
Today we see again that bing is constantly trying to update its features which might help users to find relevant data quicker and easily with the launch of ”latest posts from news sites” feature.

Music

Submission + - cfml: the context-free music language (ucsc.edu)

rndmcnlly writes: "People talk agile, extreme, but try programming in a limited model of computation and responding to shifting client demands on a second-by-second basis by modifying the software while it runs. You’d be surprised by how relaxing it is. Really."

Comment Typical modern CACM article (Score 1) 260

Long, wordy, buzz-word heavy article with a little bit of interesting content buried deep inside. I wish I hadn't bothered to read it.

In case you haven't, but are thinking you might: you can run machines that are never down, even when software is being updated, if you use a few tricks. I knew most of the one's they mentioned already, and use them on my company website, which is far from downtime-proof, but has a 3-year uptime so far: call my software maintenence status "fairly sturdy".

If you're interested in upgrading to software maintenance status "bulletproof", then read something about fault-tolerant computing in Erlang. You'll learn more that way.

Submission + - The Memory Pool System (ravenbrook.com)

Chalst writes: An unjustly neglected article from 2002, The Memory Pool System: Thirty Person-Years Of Memory Management Development Goes Open Source, describes the plumbing of a memory-management system, written by the guy who wrote the Lisp Machine's memory manager, which became the memory manager for Symbolics' DylanWorks implementation. Obscure but Cool. This article was written to announce Ravenbrook's making the code available on an open source license. So you can put it in Your Next Programming Language.

Submission + - Pirate Bay shuts down tracker (torrentfreak.com)

think_nix writes: The Pirate Bay has shut down their bit torrent tracker. Instead TPB is now using DHT [torrentfreak] (Distributed Hash Table) to distribute the torrents. TPB Blog [thepiratebay] states that DHT along with PEX (Peer Exchange) Technology is just as effective if not better for finding peers than a centralized service. The local (thelocal se) reports that shutting down the tracker and implementing DHT & PEX could be due to the latest court rulings in Sweden against 2 of tpb owners, and may decide the outcome of the case.
Privacy

Submission + - Apple patent forces ads on Mac users (pcpro.co.uk)

Barence writes: Apple has filed a patent for an operating system that effectively freezes a computer and forces the user to watch adverts. The patent, which could apply to devices such as the iPhone as well as laptop and desktop computers, describes a system where the "advertisement presentation can in effect 'take over the system' in relevant aspects for a limited time". Apple is investigating various methods of presenting the ads, including as a pane on top of any other pane in the user interface, in a "designated area of a background", or even through the device's speakers. And don't think you can ignore the ads either, because Apple plans to check if you've been watching. "The method can further include determining whether a user pays attention to the advertisement," the patent states.

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