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Nintendo

Submission + - EA Announces Boogie

mattox writes: "EA has just announced a new music/rhythm based game called Boogie for the Nintendo Wii!

Montreal, Canada — March 23, 2007 — Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: ERTS) announced today that Boogie(TM) — an all new intellectual property in development at EA Montreal will be released exclusively for the Wii(TM) worldwide in 2007.

Boogie is a unique music/rhythm-based game that takes advantage of the innovative Wii controls to get gamers off their couch, playing and dancing to a new beat.

http://ea.gamespress.com/link.asp?i=752&r=8410&r2= 6371"
Censorship

Judge Strikes Down COPA, 1998 Online Porn Law 348

Begopa sends in word that a federal judge has struck down the Child Online Protection Act. The judge said that parents can protect their children through software filters and other less restrictive means that do not limit others' rights to free speech. This was the case for which the US Department of Justice subpoenaed several search companies for search records; only Google fought the order. The case has already been to the Supreme Court. Senior U.S. District Judge Lowell Reed Jr. wrote in his decision: "Perhaps we do the minors of this country harm if First Amendment protections, which they will with age inherit fully, are chipped away in the name of their protection."
Software

Submission + - Server virtualization gotchas

johannacw writes: "Vendors tout virtualization as the Next Big Thing. It probably is, but not every single application can or should be virtualized. Adopters from The Hartford and other large shops, and consultants, talk about mistakes to avoid. (Note: this story was submitted at 10:11 AM today by Tony Troup, but there was no link to the story. Thanks for trying, Tony!)"
United States

Submission + - Think of the Childrens' futures!

azuredrake writes: ""Perhaps we do the minors of this country harm if First Amendment protections, which they will with age inherit fully, are chipped away in the name of their protection," writes Senior U.S. District Judge Lowell Reed Jr. in a case striking down a 1998 internet porn law. He goes on to say that there are easier ways for parents to protect their children, such as cheap and omnipresent parental access control software, than chipping away at fundamental rights. The whole story is available from the AP at http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070322/ap_on_hi_te/in ternet_blocking (Sorry for the proprietary link, but I couldn't find it on the AP's own site.)"
Books

Submission + - Australia discovered, again

1Liner writes: "Australia is continually being discovered, according to *The Wise One* by "China, Portugal, France, Spain and even Phoenicia".

Now Australian author Peter Trickett in his book "Beyond Capricorn" claims to have found a definite proof, that is, for the Portuguese discovery theory.

To quote:

"A 16th century maritime map in a Los Angeles library vault proves that Portuguese adventurers, not British or Dutch, were the first Europeans to discover Australia..."

"The book ... says the map, which accurately marks geographical sites along Australia's east coast in Portuguese, proves that Portuguese seafarer Christopher de Mendonca lead a fleet of four ships into Botany Bay in 1522 — almost 250 years before Britain's Captain James Cook."
Education

Submission + - Online Higher Education in Second Life

XxtraLarGe writes: "As both a technician for my college's Distance Learning program and as an avid gamer, I have been tasked with investigating Second Life as a possible way for us to extend and enhance our online classes. I've done a lot of research, reading about what other schools have done. While I personally think it is a really cool idea, I am somewhat skeptical of the actual practicality and value of what seems to be a glorified chat room. I'd like to hear from other Slashdotters about their education experience in Second Life particularly if you've been involved in setting up any online classes or taken any online classes. What sort of training would be required for faculty, etc., and is it really worth it?"
Robotics

Submission + - Dancing robot has better social skills

Will writes: "A robot blob that dances "soulfully" to different tunes could pave the way for machines that interact more naturally with human beings. Marek Michalowski of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and Hideki Kozima of the National Institute of Communications Technology in Japan programmed the squishy, yellow robot, called "Keepon", to pick out the beat in a piece of music and move along in time. It can also track the rhythmic motion of a person or another object and move in time to that. Psychologists have shown that people are more engaging when they synchronise their movement to their voice or to the voice or movement of another person. Michalowski argues that robots will need a sense of rhythm if people are to accept them too."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Paul Visie speaks on Fleecing of SF Muni-WiFi

PublicNet SF Coalition writes: "Here is some great food for thought from property rights to San Francisco Muni-WiFi by one of the pioneers of the Internet."
=============

http://public.freemuni.net/content/view/22/1/1/3/
Paul Vixie, one of the people who helped build the Internet (BIND, sendmail, cron, ISC, PAIX, etc.), spoke at the Commonwealth Club on May 10, 2006:

"I am sad to report that the great vision and ambition that helped create the San Francisco water department is nowhere to be found in the current administration.
[...]

"Right now a lot of Internet traffic from one neighborhood to another flows through Palo Alto or San Jose or Sacramento, and our eyeballs are used as negotiating tokens cash flow wars. We could do away with all of that if folks like Mayor Rolph or City Engineer O'Shaughnessy (who are jointly credited with creating the San Francisco water system) were making our wireless Internet decisions.
[...]

"I said I was sad to report on our wireless Internet plans and that's the reason. San Francisco as a vassal. Ouch. Was never meant to be."

Read the entire speech on property rights in the digital age at http://public.freemuni.net/content/view/22/1/"
Java

Submission + - Original DOS Boots in Java Applet

Rhys Newman writes: "Oxford Physics Developers have just released a demo version of JPC; a pure Java applet which boots original DOS and can run a selection of classic DOS games. See the JPC homepage for more information and online demo.

JPC emulates all the hardware of a standard PC sufficient to get DOS booting and running classic (or old) software in original form. As the DOS software is running in a completely emulated environment, the standard JVM security model applies and makes JPC a 100% safe environment to run third party x86 untested/unvetted code.

JPC can run on a mobile phone (or any other device which supports a Java 2 VM), and is also intended to enable secure sharing of CPU resources in a computer grid deployment."
Education

Submission + - USA teacher's little web site has a big impact

Susan Alyn, Florida Teacher certified in ESOL writes: "I don't know if this is of any interest to anyone here, but I am a teacher and a little web site I made is being recognized internationally. It is a very simple site, but it solves an important problem in education, for free. A researcher in Canada mentioned it in his newsletter, and Google Education News picked up my press release, and it all started when CALICO at Texas State University picked up my site in a unique way for them. It seems to me, from hits on this site, and emails with professors, that universities all over the world are now replicating my site — and, again, it is a very simple little site I made, but it does solve a problem faced by instructors in both high school and college. The most interesting part of all this to me has been how fast news of this little site traveled all over the world — 35 countries visited my site in less than two weeks, and my site has not yet been mentioned in print in any newspaper. Here is my press release published this week on Google Education News: http://www.prleap.com/pr/70006/"
Music

RIAA Caught in Tough Legal Situation 267

JeffreysTube writes "The RIAA's legal fight against a divorced mother has run into trouble, with the judge now telling the RIAA that its only two options are to proceed with a jury trial against Patty Santangelo or dismiss the case with prejudice. If the latter happens, Santangelo officially "wins" and could collect attorneys' fees. The judge is less than pleased with the RIAA, which is now trying to drop the case without giving Santangelo a chance to be declared guilty. 'This case is two years old,' wrote Judge McMahon. 'There has been extensive fact discovery. After taking this discovery, either plaintiffs want to make their case that Mrs. Santangelo is guilty of contributory copyright infringement or they do not.'"

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