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Google

Submission + - MS Office Web Apps vs. Google Docs vs. Zoho (infoworld.com)

snydeq writes: "InfoWorld's Neil McAllister provides an in-depth comparative review of office suites in the cloud, and while it takes mere minutes to find where Microsoft Office Webs Apps, Google Docs, and Zoho fail to live up to desktop expectations, each promises greater integration with the Web, including collaboration and publishing features not available with traditional apps. 'If the goal was simply to mimic the current office paradigm on the Web, Docs would be a miserable failure, but Google is looking at the bigger picture,' McAllister writes, one in which everything will move to the cloud. Zoho, for its part, makes more of an effort to mimic the look and feel of traditional desktop apps. The results are mixed, McAllister finds, but 'Zoho's real strength lies not in the merits of its individual applications, however, but in its offering as a whole.' Microsoft's defensive move to the Web, tested here as a Technical Preview, provides surprisingly effective integration with the Office desktop suite. 'But there must be a catch, right?' McAllister writes. 'Sure, and it's a doozy: Microsoft's applications don't really work.' That said, in the long run, 'Microsoft's model will resonate best with most customers.'"

Submission + - Why science fiction authors just can't win (sffmedia.com)

bowman9991 writes: 'Science fiction is rockets, chemicals and talking squids in outer space,' mocked Margaret Atwood, one of her many attempts to convince people that she is not a science fiction author, even though one of her most famous novels, 'A Handmaid's Tale', is exactly that. To some, the label 'science fiction' has become synonymous with trashy, pulpish, commercially driven gutter fiction, works you would never nominate for a major literary award. SFFMedia documents the abuse of science fiction by the established literary and academic world. Brian Aldiss, Ursula Le Guin and Kim Stanley Robinson leap to its defence. Will science fiction authors ever escape the publication ghetto?

Comment Re:Still dangerous (Score 1) 853

The other major problem with nuclear power is it's massive carbon footprint. An average nuclear plant will have about 75%-80% the footprint of a gas/coal powered station. This is due in no small part to the 'carbon cost' of extracting the nuclear ore from the ground, shipping, enriching, shipping, turning into fuel rods, shipping

...

Solar thermal is a much more efficient system of 'nuclear power' and it is very very very clean, with the nuclear reactor being 93 million miles away. :)

Please, somebody mod parent up as informative.

The Internet

Euro Parliament Warns Against Overzealous IP Enforcement 73

An anonymous reader writes "Days after New Zealand dropped its support for the 'three strikes and you're out' approach for terminating Internet subscribers, the European Parliament has now similarly rejected the proposed approach. Today the EP adopted a new report on security and fundamental freedoms on the Internet that expressly rejects disproportionate measures for IP enforcement and the use of excessive access restrictions placed by IP rights holders."
Java

Submission + - Is JCP neccessary for the open-source JDK 7? (jroller.com)

sperxios10 writes: "When Jean-Marie Dautelle asked about Java Committee Process and How to make it better?, Stephen Colebourne asked back: Is the JCP broken?.
Stephen based some of his assumptions on the controversy surrounding Java 7's modularization efforts and miss-communications of Sun with OSGi group. He initially suggested 5 remedies, such as "... a guarantee 20%, or maybe 25%, of seats to individuals", but eventually concluded:

The real solution would be to redefine Java as a core kernel, and an OSGi module system, with a central repository of modules that could be downloaded on demand. Vendors could then group together ad hoc to build new modules for everything from date-time to JSF. The market would then decide the winners. Thus the JCP would simply be the guardian of the language syntax and core libraries, an actually manageable task!
Does this proposal make any sense to you?"

PC Games (Games)

Submission + - Futures market for gaming can help the industry

An anonymous reader writes: A futures market for gaming has opened to predict the success of console hardware and games software. For gamers, this plays like fantasy football for video games in which you compete with friends or the world in your picks for a portfolio of game stocks.

For the video game industry, the simExchange can be much more. 1UP says: "Futures markets are (natch) eerily prescient when it comes to divining the future, and there isn't a company out there who wouldn't give its eye teeth for the chance to score an accurate assessment of their game or console in the public eye. simExchange isn't a tool for you and me so much as it is a tool for companies who seek to gauge public opinion before making their marketing or production decisions. Because futures markets can fluctuate as quickly as word-of-mouth, a piece of news — such as the release of a new demo, or the admission of a launch date pushback — can drastically effect how a game will perform when it hits the salesroom floor. simExchange offers companies the opportunity to watch their game's 'stock price' rise or fall in 'real-time' in the minds of gamers everywhere (and adjust accordingly) each time they do something right or wrong."
Programming

Submission + - Get Closure with JavaScript Memory Leaks

An anonymous reader writes: Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox are the two Web browsers most commonly associated with memory leaks in JavaScript. The culprit in both browsers is the component object model used to manage DOM objects. This article explains how circular references can lead to memory leaks in JavaScript, particularly when combined with closures. You'll see several common memory leak patterns involving circular references and some easy ways to work around them.

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