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Patents

Red Hat Settles Patent Case 76

darthcamaro writes "Red Hat has settled another patent case with patent holding firm Acacia. This time the patent is US Patent #6,163,776, 'System and method for exchanging data and commands between an object oriented system and relational system.' While it's great that Red Hat has ended this particular patent threat, it's not yet clear how they've settled this case. The last time Red Hat tangled with Acacia they won in an Texas jury trial. 'Red Hat routinely addresses attempts to impede the innovative forces of open source via allegations of patent infringement,' Red Hat said in a statement. 'We can confirm that Red Hat, Inc and Software Tree LLC have settled patent litigation that was pending in federal court in the Eastern District of Texas.'"
Image

Deodorant Sought to Save New Zealand's Native Birds 102

New Zealand researchers have received a NZ$600,000 grant to develop a deodorant for native birds whose strong odors make them easy targets for introduced predators. Since the birds evolved without any mammal predators they emit a very strong odor compared to birds in other parts of the world. Canterbury University researcher Jim Briskie says kiwis smell like mushrooms or ammonia, while kakapo parrots have a hint of "musty violin case."
Supercomputing

Supercomputing, There's an App For That 66

aarondubrow writes "Researchers at MIT have created an experimental system for smart phones that allows engineers to leverage the power of supercomputers for instant computation and analysis. The team performed a series of expensive high-fidelity simulations on the Ranger supercomputer to generate a small "reduced model" which was transferred to a Google Android smart phone. They were then able to solve engineering and fluid flow problems on the phone and visualize the results interactively. The project proved the potential for reduced order methods to perform real-time and reliable simulations for complicated problems on handheld devices."

Comment Re:Karma will run over your Dogma (Score 1) 1231

I installed the beta of Karmic UNR, and it imported users from the existing Win XP partition. Even set up a profile photo on the gdm picker -- but the photo it associated with my profile was my wife's photo, not mine. I really wonder how that happened.

Then, I couldn't see how to change the photo. After googling around I saw a mention of gdmphotosetup. Trying to run that in an xterm, the system informed me that I needed gdm-2.20 or some such. Apt-getting that, there was a warning about package dependencies -- then when I rebooted graphical log-on was not working at all.

I can still log on to the console and run startx so to me it's not that bad. At least it's a funny bug 8^).

Networking

Submission + - Qualifications of MIS Consultant?

A Numinous Cohort writes: "Someone working on an agriculture-related project in a developing country sent me this SOS:

Please help! we need some info to help us draft our Project Implementation Manual. As i told you before, we are required to set up the MIS for the Project, specially for monitoring progress. At this point, we need to know what an MIS consultant should be able to do for the Project (Terms of Reference), and what his/her qualifications should be. Any ideas?

My first impulse was to pose this question on Stack Overflow but realized it is not a programming question, so I turn to the wisdom of the Slashdot crowds.

I should mention that I had difficulty choosing the topic, finally settling on "Networking" as it is an important aspect of the project--but then so would be "Infrastructure", "Staffing", "Project Management" (none of which I could see in the list of suggested topics). So, a secondary question, why are these not on the list of choices?

"
Programming

Submission + - Clojure 1.0 Released (google.com)

Hornsby writes: "Yesterday marked the official release of Clojure 1.0. After several years of heavy development, the 1.0 branch will enable people to consume a stable version of Clojure and move to bugfix-only incremental versions while preserving API stability. Clojure was produced over the course of a self-funded sabbatical by it's author, Rich Hickey, and aims to provide a modern Lisp running on the JVM with excellent support for concurrency and Java interoperability."
HP

Submission + - Whatever happened to Carly Fiorina's headhunter?

An anonymous reader writes: In 1999, a little known Silicon Valley recruiting firm named Christian and Timbers was appointed to conduct the search for Hewlett Packard CEO Lew Platt's successor. The stunning selection of Lucent executive Carly Fiorina rocketed Jeff Christian to fame and fortune as well; he published a bestselling book on executive search, and phones were ringing off the hook. Two years later, the dot com era was over, business was no longer booming, and Christian was behaving erratically and eventually agreed to leave his own firm. Carly was ousted by HP's board in 2005; Christian himself hit bottom a year later.
Quickies

Submission + - Digging Dinosaurs Made Underground Dens

anthemaniac writes: Scientists have long puzzled over how some dinosaurs and other creatures survived the asteroid impact that supposedly caused the KT mass extinction 65 million years ago and wiped out all the big dinos. One idea has been that smaller animals, including mammals, could have endured the fallout, the big chill, the subsequent volcanoes, and whatever else by burrowing. Now scientists have come up with the first evidence of burrowing dinosaurs. They speculate that underground dens might explain how some dinosaurs got through long, dark winters at high latitudes, too.
Wii

Submission + - Wii Doing What Nintendo Wanted It To

superdan2k writes: "When Nintendo brought the Wii to market, one of their stated goals was to get people who didn't normally play video games using their console. Based on this article from the AP, it seems they've made some headway in capturing the senior citizen market. With the Wii's price point, and it being a good way to get people engaged in physical exercise, it's easy to envision it catching on with other retirement homes beyond the one mentioned in the article. Now that it's expanding beyond the 'typical' video game demographic, has the Wii taken the first steps toward winning the console war?"
Java

Submission + - Java-based x86 Emulator

jaavaaguru writes: "Researchers at Oxford University have produced a Java-based x86 emulator which they hope will be useful in testing applications and learning about viruses without damaging the host PC's operating system. They have an online demo available which boots DOS and has some games to play. Being purely Java, this emulator should be able to run on almost anything, including cell phones."
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Was the Death of Captain America a Marketing Move?

HikingStick writes: [Or, perhaps I'd have more luck with this submission if I retitled it "Did George Bush Kill Captain America?"]

Just a few short weeks after Marvel killed off Captain America, Newyorkbusiness.com reports that Marvel unveiled plans for a $1B theme park in Dubai. Marvel is building the part with help of a regional firm, Al Ahli Group, and negotiations have been underway for the past two years. Is it possible that Cap, an icon of Americana, was killed off so there would be no American overtones to the park? Let's face it — most of Marvel's other heros could appear on any national background with little change, but good old Captain America may just be too much for an international marketplace — especially in the Mideast today. Did our current involvement in the Mideast force Marvel to kill off Cap? What do /.ers think?

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