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Comment In Corporate US, it's for Legal Documentation ! (Score 2) 69

Such' 'spyware' is rife in the Corporate world, but it's called "Document retention" and "monitoring for legal cases". Corporate smart phones, computers, etc. are all equipped with methods to record everything we do. Just because some shyster could possibly want to use it as an axe to such money from our company.

You *CAN* get a job in industry writing this kind of code. Seriously. It's out there.

Image

BMW Working On Laser Headlamps Screenshot-sm 330

MrSeb writes "LED headlamps are only just trickling onto the market — mostly on high-end cars — but now it seems a certain German automaker has plans for laser headlamps. 'Laser light is the next logical step in car light development ... for series production within a few years in the BMW i8 plug-in hybrid,' says BMW. Lasers have the potential to be simultaneously more powerful, more efficient, and smaller than other headlamp types. Before you get too excited, though: the output of laser headlights will be modulated for safety."
Advertising

NYT Working On 'Magic Mirror' For Bathroom Surfing 138

MrSeb writes "If the New York Times Research & Development Lab has its wicked way, you will soon be able to stop taking your mobile computer of choice into the bathroom — and use a 'magic mirror' instead. On average we spend an hour in the bathroom every day, and the magic mirror — which is built from a 'data-bearing' mirror, Microsoft Kinect, and a healthy dollop of ingenuity — is designed to capitalize on that time by letting you surf the web and increase the New York Times' advertising revenue."

Comment RTFP (Read the Foolish Policies) (Score 5, Interesting) 1307

What you've done would cause any professional IT group to get out the hot tar, feathers, and rail. Or at least come into your office and ask you politely to remove the damn server from their facility. And never do this again. You must have missed all the security briefings, the issues with HIPPA, and whatnot when you were looking at systems. What you've done is to create a 'rogue system'.

Imagine one of your kids sets up a server in your house. You don't understand it, you don't know if it's happily sniffing network traffic to steal passwords so pizza can be ordered using your credit cards, serving up pr0n, or just running minecraft. Would you willy nilly allow the kids to open a port on your firewall without the ability to audit what they're doing ?

Of course not.

Personally I'm amazed that they only asked for an account on your little server. I would have gone over and watched while you removed it from the facility and put in in your car.

Comment There were many such systems (Score 1) 203

I used a Mentor Graphics Apollo workstation from 1982 for PCB design, software development, word processing, etc. It multi-tasked... compiling, reading errors (I mean *features*) and correcting the code in another window was awesome coming from a DEC environment. Windowing, mouse, etc. I never understood what all the hubbub was about... switched directly to a Mac after I left that company.

Image

Samsung Rains Paper Airplanes From Space Screenshot-sm 122

itwbennett writes "Note to Samsung: If you want to prove how reliable your SD memory cards are, don't hire 'the U.K.'s leading paper plane professional' to build you 100 special paper aircraft. And then definitely don't use a giant helium balloon to send them 122,503 feet into space. Because while some of the planes will fly as far as Sydney and Bangalore, chances are that all the press you'll get will be about the crazy stunt and no one will remember a thing about the SD cards."
Transportation

Ford Building Cars That Talk To Other Cars 239

thecarchik writes "Ford's new system works over a dedicated short-range WiFi system on a secure channel allocated by the FCC. The company says the system one-ups radar safety systems by allowing full 360-degree coverage even when there's no direct line of sight. Scenarios where this could benefit safety or traffic? Predicting collision courses with unseen vehicles, seeing sudden stops before they're visible, and spotting traffic pattern changes on a busy highway. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reported in October that vehicle-to-vehicle warning systems could address nearly 80 percent of reported crashes not involving drunk drivers. As such, it could potentially save tens of thousands of lives per year."
Moon

Does the Moon Have Military Value? 332

MarkWhittington writes "Despite the fact that under President Barack Obama's space policy, Americans will not be going back to the moon any time soon, discussions are occurring about what, if any, military value the Earth's nearest neighbor has. Opinions, as can be expected, vary on the subject."
Microsoft

Halo Reach Leaked To Filesharing Sites 160

Stoobalou writes "What appears to be the full version of Bungie's Halo Reach game has turned up on a number of file sharing sites. The hotly-anticipated multi-player shooter had been hosted on a private area of the Microsoft Live site in order for journalists to preview the release, but Microsoft has admitted that a security breach has meant that pirates have been able to bypass personal download codes given to writers. Disk images of the game are now appearing on a number of public torrent and P2P sites as well as on popular NZB aggregators and Usenet binaries newsgroups." The game isn't due to be released until September 14th. Microsoft is said to be "aggressively pursuing" whoever grabbed the files without their permission.

Comment Dangit, it's good training ! (Score 4, Interesting) 671

I'm sure some people will be offended, but gosh darn it.. any trained soldier will tell you that training to 'think like the enemy' is a good thing. It lets you anticipate him and kill him before he kills you. If the soldier's mom is offended, I'm sorry to hear about it, but it is distinctly possible that some of her son's squad may find their lives saved at a future date by playing simulations like this one.

I hope that someone takes her aside and explains that to her.

Comment Like there's massive Prior Art on this one.... (Score 1) 774

The Film "The Net".
SouthPark's Wacky Molestation Adventure...

etc. etc. etc.

The problem of course is the assumption of guilt, which is a complete reverse of normal American law (Innocent until Proven Guilty). I recall my Dad (Professor at a major University) got hit with a few 'sexual harassment' complaints. Fortunately he had good notes. In both cases the young lady had actually offered sexual favors in exchange for grades, and he turned them down. And they then claimed it was his idea. Meetings with the Dean, hassle, etc... He and my Mom laughed about it.
 

Comment 42mpg, gasoline, no batteries, diesel, etc. (Score 1) 1141

2002 Honda Civic and I use some limited hypermiling techniques. Stick shift helps. I don't shut off the engine, but I coast when possible. If everyone drove for mileage we'd see a national 10-20% increase in fuel efficiency. Want a national CAFE rating improvement? Offer classes in fuel efficient driving.

And drivers would be safer. Driving in a fuel efficient manner requires that you be much more aware of the road in front of you and your surroundings.

Comment It depends if you count cursing.... (Score 1) 674

Most of us just speak one language to our families, customers, coworkers, and so forth. We occasionally speak another language at home, and I'm constantly throwing words in a couple of other languages at my kids to keep them inquisitive and build their minds.

But I will happily curse in Spanish, French, German, and a little bit of Russian. Of course when someone actually understands what I'm saying, it's an embarrassing situation.

And puhleeze..... programming languages are not Spoken languages. Unless you're using voice recognition.

Comment Re:Laser Ablation.... Yeah But (Score 1) 508

The point is you lose energy over distance. Even a collimated beam experiences divergence and power loss. A tiny bit of known material accelerated to a sufficient speed will not experience distance power loss in vacuum, except through collision with micrometeorites and interplanetary gases. Hence my recommendation.

It's been almost 20 years since I worked with Ground Based Free Electron Laser beam directors for the SDI project (see Starfire Lab if you want to see one), but it's a very real issue. Have you noted that railgun research is just as active as directed energy research ? Yup. There's a reason for that. Of course railgun projectiles in atmosphere have their own issues.

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