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Medicine

Alzheimer's Disease Possibly Linked To Sleep Deprivation 164

sonnejw0 writes "NewScientist is reporting a link between sleep deprivation and Alzheimer's Disease via an increased amyloid-beta plaque load thought responsible for a large part of the symptoms of the disease, in mice. Medication to abrogate insomnia reduced the plaque load. Also discussed is a recently discovered sleep cycle of amyloid-beta deposition in the brain, in which levels decrease while asleep. 'Holtzman also tried sending the mice to sleep with a drug that is being trialled for insomnia, called Almorexant. This reduced the amount of plaque-forming protein. He suggests that sleeping for longer could limit the formation of plaques, and perhaps block it altogether.'"
Books

xkcd To Be Released In Book Form 198

History's Coming To writes "xkcd creator Randall Munroe has revealed on his blag that the acclaimed stick-figure comic will be produced in real dead-tree book form. Fantastic news for all fans of comedy, maths, science, and relationship screw-ups — especially given that the book will be sold in aid of the charity 'Room To Read.' Rumors that the book contains a joke in the ISBN remain unconfirmed." The NY Times article that Munroe links (registration may be required) is from April of this year, and I am amazed that this community didn't note the story at that time. The book will be published by breadpig, which was created by Alexis Ohanian, one of the founders of reddit.
Movies

Star Trek Sequel Already Planned 213

bowman9991 writes "Paramount Pictures are so confident about the box office potential of the upcoming Star Trek reboot directed by J. J. Abrams that they're already working on a sequel. They've hired Roberto Orci, Alex Kurtzman, and Damon Lindelof to write the screenplay. We're looking at a possible 2011 release for the next Star Trek movie with the same cast. Now that they've committed themselves, let's hope it lives up to expectations."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Eric Raymond gets the clue stick from uber-hacker 11

An anonymous reader writes: Eric Raymond recently wrote to defend open-source innovation against the vicious attacks of some rabid proprietary software zealot. The guy later complains that ESR quoted him out of context, and that he exaggerates the role hackers played in the development of the web, drawing a parallel with his own role in 3D games. ESR, apparently very unimpressed, misses the clue entirely and goes all nuclear on him: "You are articulating the assumptions of someone who is merely talented. I, on the other hand, have known geniuses [...] I may actually be one myself." End of story? Not quite, here is the kicker. The guy responds: "To the best of my knowledge, there are less than 30 people on this planet who can claim having designed a successful operating system entirely from scratch[...]. I'm one of them." It turns out that ESR's "victim", not content with having written one of the earliest 3D game, is also behind HP's Itanium virtualization technology...
Java

Submission + - Is it possible to make a game with only 4KB? (java4k.com)

ArniArent writes: "A game programming competition, at Java4K.com (http://www.java4k.com), has just started. This is the fifth time it's running and might be one of the largest game programming competition in the Java community, with over 50 games submitted each year! Everyone are allowed to submit their game, as long as it follows the simple rules; the game must be written in Java and final package 4KB max! You might ask, what can you do with only 4KB? Are these text based games? Amazingly they have managed to create very nice looking 2D and also 3D games that are fun to play. This might be a good start for anyone interested in learning game programming, and is also a good time consumer for anyone who got nothing better to do over the holidays! :) Check out http://www.java4k.com for more information."
Power

Submission + - Electric vehicles to back up the power grid 1

holy_calamity writes: Researchers in Delaware are working with electricity grid giant PJM on a scheme to use the batteries of electric vehicles to backup the grid while parked. Cars typically spend 23 hours a day off the road. During that time electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles can soak up excess generated power or trickle juice into the grid to smooth out mis-matches between supply and demand. Just 100 electric vehicles running the vehicle-to-grid software like their current prototype can provide 1MW of storage. City officials in Austin, Texas are keen to try the idea.
Security

Submission + - California Testers Find Flaws in Voting Machines (arstechnica.com) 1

quanticle writes: According to Ars Technica, California testers have discovered severe flaws in the ES&S voting machines. The paper seals were easily bypassed, and the lock could be picked with a "common office implement". After cracking the physical security the device, the testers found it simple to reconfigure the BIOS to boot off external media. After booting a version of Linux, they found that critical system files were stored in plain text. They also found that the election management system that initializes the voting machines used unencrypted protocols to transmit the initialization data to the voting machines, allowing for a man-in-the-middle attack.

Altogether, it is a troubling report for a company already in hot water for selling uncertified equipment to counties.

Communications

Submission + - 99% recognition accuracy on thousands of voices! (blogspot.com)

Wireless speech recognition writes: "IBM Research announces the new Cell Broadband Engine(tm) Cell/B.E processor; capable of literally perfect recognition on thousands of voices, at once. This new Cell/B.E. is a streaming multiprocessor who's architecture contains a general-purpose IBM PowerPC processor, working with additional special-purpose processing cores jointly designed by Sony, Toshiba, and IBM.

The Cell/B.E. can handle thousands of simultaneous voice channels in real time, and IBM states "On both the Cell/B.E. processor and the software platforms, recognition accuracy was 99%".

The research team goes on to conclude:
"We have implemented and demonstrated a prototype speech recognition engine that is capable of processing approximately 1,000 speech channels on a single Cell/B.E. processor. The kernel computations are designed to be highly scalable, and we expect this performance result to generalize well to commercial speech systems."

Data Storage

Submission + - Samsung's 64GB SSD drive review (computerworld.com) 4

Lucas123 writes: "Computerworld's Rich Ericson reviewed Samsung's first large capacity solid state disk drive and says it's heartier and faster than the drive in Sony's new flash-based notebook. It's also got an impressive mean time between failure of more than 2 million hours, versus under 500,000 hours for the Samsung's other traditional hard drives and the company says the drive can withstand an operating shock of 1,500Gs at .5 miliseconds (versus 300Gs at 2 miliseconds for a traditional hard drive. "Power consumption is just 1 watt when the system is active, 0.1 watt when idle, and .06 watt in standby mode. (Equivalent power consumption figures with hard drives are 2.1, 1.5, and .2 watts, respectively.) That could explain why we got 5 hours, 22 minutes of power in Max Battery mode when surfing the Web, creating documents with OpenOffice, or uploading and downloading files to an FTP server.""
Social Networks

Submission + - Applications go outside of Facebook

An anonymous reader writes: Up until now facebook applications have been inaccessible to the millions of people on the Internet that haven't joined Facebook yet. This policy also prevented applications from being indexed by search engines had the potential to fuel their growth significantly.

As of now facebook has started allowing people to access application canvas pages even when not logged in to Facebook, whilst still respecting their users' privacy. This means that user-specific data available on public canvas pages will be first name and profile picture (and then only if the user's profile picture is already publicly searchable). A fantastic example of this at work is Sponsor Me (http://apps.facebook.com/sponsor-me/), a facebook application which allows users to setup and run campaigns for any purpose. As you can see due to the recent facebook changes, Sponsor Me campaigns are now available to external users, giving the ability for campaigns to be discovered by the millions of non-facebook users which otherwise wouldn't be able to help out.

This can surely only help attract more user to facebook, as application developers find all new ways to tempt users into facebook with the variety of applications.

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