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Comment Re:Assuming of course hardware is the bottleneck (Score 0) 465

I wonder if they teach that in those call centers in India, or those single programming courses companies make people take when they're trying to cut out the cost of programmers altogether.

Yes, they do. Not in call centers though, but in Universities across India. If your purpose was to slander Indian education system or belittle the coders there - then that's a FAIL. The guys there are as good [or bad] as they are over here. The spread is larger because of the bigger population.

Moon

Indian Moon Mission Launched 305

hackerdownunder writes "India's maiden lunar mission (Chandrayaan-1) got off to a flying start today. Describing the launch as 'perfect and precise,' the chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), G Madhavan Nair, said that it would be 14 days before the satellite would enter into lunar orbit. Chandrayaan carries eleven payloads: five designed and developed in India, three from the European Space Agency, one from Bulgaria and two from NASA."
The Internet

Submission + - West Virginia Republicans Vote Online (theintelligencer.net)

InternetVoting writes: "The West Virginia Republican Party will be offering Internet voting for their 2008 Convention delegates. These delegates will be responsible for choosing the West Virginia GOP's nomination for President at the 2008 WV GOP Convention. Online voting will be available from Jan. 1 — Jan. 14 via the convention website. From the story:
"West Virginia Republicans may usher in the future for democracy when they choose their delegates for the state presidential convention online later this year.""

It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - P2P Sites Mock MediaDefender's Legal Threats (arstechnica.com) 1

Happy Talk Lika a Pirate Day! writes: "Apparently, MediaDefender's attempts to stop the email leak aren't going so well. Several major BitTorrent sites have replied to their claims with hilarious rejoinders. While they've had somewhat more luck DoSing the new MediaDefender-Defenders web site, which reports that 1020 out of the 1257 IPs that are DoSing them are from known MediaDefender subnets, the BitTorrent sites have just been publishing their legal threats and laughing. ISOHunt responded by asking them, "If Mr. Gerber is truly as experienced in IP law as his bio claims he is why is it that he is incapable of composing a DMCA takedown notice as per USC Title 17 Section 512?" Meganova was even less kind, telling the "asstunnels" what they can go do with themselves and saying "In case you haven't noticed, this site is located in Europe (I hope you can point it out on a map)." Perhaps some US copyright lawyers, like some people out there in our nation, don't have maps?"
Technology

Russia Tests World's Largest Non-Nuclear Bomb 632

mahesh_gharat writes "Russia has tested the "Father of all bombs," a conventional air-delivered explosive that experts say can only be compared with a nuclear weapon in terms of its destructive power.The device is a fuel-air explosive, commonly known as a vacuum bomb, that spreads a high incendiary vapour cloud over a wide area and then ignites it, creating an ultra-sonic shock wave and searing fireball that destroys everything in its wake."
Censorship

Submission + - NYC man Arrested for Reciting First Amendment

CWRUisTakingMyMoney writes: 'Reverend Billy' — a cross between a street-corner preacher and an Elvis impersonator (but blond) — was arrested on harassment charges last week while reciting the First Amendment through a megaphone in Manhattan's Union Square. Have we reached the point where we can't even (rather uniquely) recite from our own Constitution without being arrested or shouted down?
Security

The Current State of the Malware/AntiVirus Arms Race 139

An anonymous reader writes "An article at Net Security explores how malware has developed self-defense techniques. This evolution is the result of the double-edged sword of the malware arms race. Anti-virus technology is ever more advanced, but as a result surviving viruses are increasingly sophisticated. What Net Security offers is a lengthy look at the current state of that arms race. 'There are many different kinds of malware self-defense techniques and these can be classified in a variety of ways. Some of these technologies are meant to bypass antivirus signature databases, while others are meant to hinder analysis of the malicious code. One malicious program may attempt to conceal itself in the system, while another will not waste valuable processor resources on this, choosing instead to search for and counter specific types of antivirus protection. These different tactics can be classified in different ways and put into various categories.'"
Windows

Submission + - Best small business Anti-Virus package for WinTel?

dr_strang writes: In these times of surreptitious payola and suspect 'page ranking', it's hard to find truly unbiased reviews for software. As the sysadmin for my company, I am looking to replace the notoriously clunky and resource-intensive Network Associates package and find a truly lightweight, effective and easy to manage anti-virus suite for our smallish (under 100 devices) network, including XP Pro machines and 2003 servers. I haven't been able to find very many reviews that address the largest concern I have, which is the biggest problem I have with Network Associates: resource hogging. If you have insights to share or know of review sites that are fair and informative, I'd love to hear it.
Space

A Snapshot of the Universe 3 Trillion Years From Now 197

ultracool wrote with a link to a Science Daily article that requires that you think long term. Really long term. Case Western Reserve University physicists are theorizing that trillions of years from now the universe will become 'static'. Essentially, the information that we use to gauge our Galaxy's position in the universe will have moved beyond the 'visible horizon. "What remains will be 'an island universe' made from the Milky Way and its nearby galactic Local Group neighbors in an overwhelmingly dark void ... The researchers followed up that discussion with one tracking early elements like helium and deuterium produced in the Big Bang. They predict systems that allow us to detect primordial deuterium will be dispersed throughout the universe to become undetectable, while helium in concentrations of approximately 25 percent at the Big Bang will become indiscernible as stars will produce far more helium in the course of their lives to cloud the origins of the early universe."
Data Storage

Submission + - Ultra-Dense Optical Storage -- On One Photon

brendotroy writes: Researchers at the University of Rochester have made an optics breakthrough that allows them to encode an entire image's worth of data into a photon, slow the image down for storage, and then retrieve the image intact. Squeezing that much information into so small a space and retrieving it intact opens the door to optical buffering — storing information as light.

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