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The Almighty Buck

Economic Crisis Will Eliminate Open Source 753

An anonymous reader writes "The economic crisis will ultimately eliminate open source projects and the 'Web 2.0 free economy,' says Andrew Keen, author of The Cult of the Amateur. Along with the economic downturn and record job loss, he says, we will see the elimination of projects including Wikipedia, CNN's iReport, and much of the blogosphere. Instead of users offering their services 'for free,' he says, we're about to see a 'sharp cultural shift in our attitude toward the economic value of our labor' and a rise of online media businesses that reward their contributors with cash. Companies that will survive, he says, include Hulu, iTunes, and Mahalo. 'The hungry and cold unemployed masses aren't going to continue giving away their intellectual labor on the Internet in the speculative hope that they might get some "back end" revenue,' says Keen."

Comment Re:That's really a shame. (Score 1) 356

Do you have any source for your claim that they found Earhart's plane? This is the first I've heard that it was found, and Google doesn't turn up any evidence that it has been found yet. There are a number of websites that have theories as to where Earhart's plane is, but no one has yet claimed to have found it.
Power

Submission + - LHC offline until April 2009 (or longer) 1

rufey writes: The recent problems at the Large Hadron Collider will now keep it idle until spring 2009. The official press release is here. The LHC went offline due to a suspected failure in a superconducting connection, which overheated and caused around 100 of the LHC's super-cooled magnets to heat up by as much as 100 degrees. This resulted in the accidental release of a ton of liquid helium. The process required to repair the failed superconducting connection involves weeks of warming up the affected area from -456 degrees Fahrenheit to room temperature, and then several more weeks to cool it back down after the repair is made. The total amount of time to do this will spill over into CERN's scheduled winter maintenance/shutdown period, which is partly done to save money on electricity during the period of peak demand.
Privacy

Submission + - DHS policy on laptop searches at borders

rufey writes: MSNBC has an article up detailing some interesting tidbits about the Department of Homeland Security's recent policy (warning: PDF file) allowing border searches of laptops.

From the article: Federal agents may take a traveler's laptop or other electronic device to an off-site location for an unspecified period of time without any suspicion of wrongdoing, as part of border search policies the Department of Homeland Security recently disclosed. Also, officials may share copies of the laptop's contents with other agencies and private entities for language translation, data decryption or other reasons
Hardware Hacking

Submission + - Hacking by cooling DRAM

rufey writes: A group of researchers from Princeton University have published a paper detailing a method of obtaining encryption keys to encrypted hard drives by cooling the memory chips on a system so that the contents of the DRAM chips can be read minutes or even hours later. From their announcement: "Interestingly, if you cool the DRAM chips, for example by spraying inverted cans of "canned air" dusting spray on them, the chips will retain their contents for much longer. At these temperatures (around -50 C) you can remove the chips from the computer and let them sit on the table for ten minutes or more, without appreciable loss of data. Cool the chips in liquid nitrogen (-196 C) and they hold their state for hours at least, without any power. Just put the chips back into a machine and you can read out their contents"
Space

Submission + - US to shoot down broken satellite

rufey writes: The latest news on the spy satellite that cannot be controlled and will soon re-etner the Earth's atmosphere is that the Pentagon has plans to fire a missile to destroy the satellite before it can re-enter Earth's atmosphere. The story of this satellite has been covered in recent weeks on Slashdot here and here.
Space

Submission + - More solar panel problems for ISS

rufey writes: This week there have been two pieces of bad news from the International Space Station. First was the discovery of metal shavings inside a problematic rotary joint used to keep one set of solar panels in the optimal position for power generation. At the close of a subsequent spacewalk, after it was relocated to its permanent location, the unfurling of the 4B solar panel resulted in it tearing in two places. A spacewalk is now planned for November 4th to attempt to fix the tear. The upcoming spacewalk is not without risks, including the remote possibility of electrocution since it is impossible to stop the solar panel from generating electricity during the repair attempt. NASA says the ripped wing needs to be fixed or the solar rotary joint problem solved before any more shuttles can fly to the space station and continue construction. With a hard deadline of 2010 for Shuttle retirement, NASA does not have much wiggle room in the schedule in order to finish ISS construction.
Science

Ancient Village Unearthed Near Stonehenge 186

cityhunter007 writes to point out coverage on CNN.com about an ancient village discovered two miles from Stonehenge that may have housed workers building the monument, or perhaps visitors after it was constructed. The village, at a site known as Durrington Walls, dates from about the time Stonehenge was built, 2600 BCE. The article says: "The researchers speculated that Durrington Walls was a place for the living and Stonehenge — where cremated remains have been found — was a cemetery and memorial... Stonehenge was oriented to face the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset, while the wooden circle at Durrington Walls faced the midwinter sunrise and midsummer sunset."
Windows

Submission + - Automatic Invalidation Update?

Anonymous Coward writes: "Microsoft has just launched an automatic update for IE6 to IE7, that will not go away. The update applies to Windows XP. The fun part is that to use the automatic update you need to justify your install of XP again. As my computer is an IBM NetVista that came with an OEM copy of XP and was originally leased to a business this could present problems unless I take the computer back to the seller as the computer is just set up to user. It seems that the release of IE7 has now become another Microsoft trick to catch pirated versions of XP. Having nothing but an OEM sticker license is becoming a real pain in the but. This is one user who after speaking to his wife tonight is going to Linux for good. It is extremely unfortunate that legitimate users and honest people are being put through this nonsense by a corporate bully. Is there no end to how despotic Microsoft will become if they are allowed to continue to abuse their monopoly?"
Space

Submission + - Sea Launch Suffers it's Second Failure

twostar writes: The first Sea Launch launch of the year ended it a spectacular fireball on the launch pad. As the rocket engines started up, the rocket went down and enveloped the launch platform in fire prior to the video feed being cut off. The announcer quickly concluded the video broadcast to the Sea Launch logo.

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/sealaunch/nss8/statu s.html
The Internet

Bosworth On Why AJAX Failed, Then Succeeded 265

An anonymous reader writes "eWeek has a story describing a talk by former Microsoft developer Adam Bosworth, now a VP at Google, entitled 'Physics, Speed and Psychology: What Works and What Doesn't in Software, and Why.' Bosworth depicts issues with processing, broadband, natural language, and human behavior; and he dishes on Microsoft." Quoting: "'Back in '96-'97, me and a group of people... helped build stuff that these days is called AJAX,' Bosworth said. 'We sat down and took a hard look at what was going to happen with the Internet and we concluded, in the face of unyielding opposition and animosity from virtually every senior person at Microsoft, that the thick client was on its way out and it was going to be replaced by browser-based apps. Saying this at Microsoft back in '96 was roughly equivalent to wandering around in a fire wearing matches,' he said. 'But we concluded we should go and build this thing. And we put all this stuff together so people could build thin-client applications... Now you hear about AJAX all the time, but this was built in '97,' Bosworth said. Yet, AJAX failed for a variety of reasons, including some 'big mistakes.'"
Data Storage

Submission + - Hard Drive Loss

CommiNazi writes: I've run into a little bit of a curiosity. Mostly concerning the loss of hard drive space on a newly formatted internal hard-drive. On a brand new 200 GB SATA hard drive once formatted shows 188 GB's. This is to be expected. However, my secondary HD of the same make and model once formatted shows as 192 GB's. A third hard drive completely different brand, a 250GB SATA shows up 233 GB's. All are NTFS So my question is; Is there any rhyme or reason to the amount of loss on these drives? I fully understand that a hard drive never has full use of the available space because of the file system, however, why the discrepancies?
Space

Hubble Camera Lost "For Good" 190

Several readers wrote in to tell us, following up on the recent story of the shutting down of Hubble's main camera, that program engineers are now saying that the camera is probably gone for good. The trouble resulted from a short circuit on Saturday in Hubble's most popular instrument, the Advanced Camera for Surveys. NASA engineers reported Monday that most of the camera's capabilities, including the ability to take the sort of deep cosmic postcards that have inspired the public, had probably been lost. We'll be pining for more of those amazing images until the James Webb launches in 2013.
Update: 01/30 23:28 GMT by KD : Reader Involved astronomer wrote in with an addendum / clarification to this story: "I'm a grant-funded astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute (www.stsci.edu) in Baltimore. I am very concerned that the article conveys the wrong idea about HST. While HST's science capacity is diminished with the loss of ACS, HST lives on and will continue to produce world-class science, even before its servicing mission in Sept. 2008, which will upgrade the instrument suite with the most sophisticated imagers in history." Read on for the rest of his note.
United States

Submission + - Navy Releases Rail Gun Video

Blair (it is a guy's name) writes: The Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) in Dahlgren, VA has released a video of their 8-megajoule test shot performed on the 2nd of October 2006. The video pops up when you load their homepage.

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