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Comment Re:What a pity (Score 2, Informative) 179

What I am saying is, seven years in to the stark reality posed by the threat of Islamic terrorism, I am surprised that India hasnt opted to carpet bomb Pakistan occupied Kashmir.

A correction, its not 7 years, its almost 20 years since islamic terrorism started in India.
This is the beginning I think, and the terrorists have never looked back.

The Internet

GENI To Replace Internet, Gets $12M Funding 295

Postglobalism writes "A massive project to redesign and rebuild the Internet from scratch is inching along with $12 million in government funding and donations of network capacity by two major research organizations. Many researchers want to rethink the Internet's underlying architecture, saying a 'clean-slate' approach is the only way to truly address security and other challenges that have cropped up since the Internet's birth in 1969."
User Journal

Journal Journal: Apple Mobile me still not working for everyone !

CNN Money Reports "Apple Inc.'s (AAPL) premium email service continues to suffer from outages as the consumer-electronics maker takes another dent to its typically sterling customer-service reputation."
Why is it that Apple can get away with this, inspite the fact that its much touted Premium email service is unavailable to 1% of its customers for about a week. I t
Programming

Best Chair For Desktop Coding? 742

wifeoflurker writes "Can someone give me recommendations for a desk chair to give my husband as a Father's Day gift? He currently uses a cheap one he got from Office Max, but I want him to have a really comfortable one. He spends his life in this chair (coding and lurking on Slashdot). I don't have time to research good chairs on the internet today (I'm chasing my 10 month old around, and she seems to get into the most mischief when I'm staring at the computer screen), so I figured a few folks here might share their personal recommendations." Has there been any great progress in the state of the art (of sitting) since the last time readers sought recommendations for back-friendly chairs a few years back, or the perfect computer chair nearly a decade back? Is there even such a thing as a back-friendly chair, or should we all be in astronaut-style lounge workstations?
The Internet

Submission + - Update: Undersea Cable Damage

warrior_s writes: "Some news sites are reporting that progress has been made on identifying the cause of undersea cable damage that happened some time ago. The Dubai Port Trust authorities have impounded two ships that are believed to have been responsible for the undersea cable damage, which crippled Internet services in India earlier this year. CNN-IBN (CNN in India) is reporting that an Indian chief officer of an Iraqi vessel that was allegedly responsible for snapping an undersea communication cable in February leading to widespread Internet outage in India and the UAE has been arrested and will face trial.
Google News has some good coverage also."
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft demos its vision of the future

warrior_s writes: Microsoft Research recently held its annual display of current projects. PCWorld take a look at some of the products that realistically could make it through to consumers.
One of my favorites, LucidTouch: The current setup includes a touch sensor layer on the back of the device. That senses when a user's fingers are touching it. The camera attached behind it sends an image of the fingers to the device, where the image is overlaid lightly, like a shadow, on the screen. In the prototype on display, Baudisch showed a map on the device screen. Moving his fingers on the back of the device, he could choose an item on the map. The concept solves the "fat finger problem", where your finger covers up the actual spot that you're trying to touch on the screen, he said.
There are lot of other interesting projects, but given microsoft's track record, its hard to say how many will land in the hands of consumers.
Music

Submission + - Don't sue, new EMI boss tells RIAA 1

warrior_s writes: From p2p net, New boss of EMI(one of the big four that forms RIAA), and ex-Googler — CIO Douglas Merrill says, it's a "poor business model to sue your customers. I don't think that's a sustainable strategy."

Quoted by the Guardian, he was referring to Warner Music, EMI, Vivendi Universal and Sony BMG's current practice of trying to use legal systems around the world to force their customers into buying corporate 'product' rather than using the free P2P networks and independent music sites and services.

"There is academic research that shows file sharing is a good thing for artists and not necessarily bad," said Merrill. "We should do a bunch of experiments to find out what the business model is."
Hardware Hacking

Hacker Club Publishes German Official's Fingerprint 253

A number of readers let us know about the Chaos Computer Club's latest caper: they published the fingerprint of German Secretary of the Interior Wolfgang Schäuble (link is to a Google translation of the German original). The club has been active in opposition to Germany's increasing push to use biometrics in, for example, e-passports. Someone friendly to the club's aims captured Schäuble's fingerprint from a glass he drank from at a panel discussion. The club published 4,000 copies of their magazine Die Datenschleuder including a plastic foil reproducing the minister's fingerprint — ready to glue to someone else's finger to provide a false biometric reading. The CCC has a page on their site detailing how to make such a fake fingerprint. The article says a ministry spokesman alluded to possible legal action against the club.
Privacy

Submission + - Police database used to harass family (wsbtv.com) 2

Bonker writes: A police officer in DeKalb County, Georgia, used a Georgia Crime Information Center computer to retrieve personal information about a woman dating her separated husband. She then created a flyer with the woman's picture entitled 'Homewrecker' and mailed it to the woman's family, neighbors, and others. Despite the fact that using the computer system for personal reasons is a crime, the officer, Teresa Shover, a 13-year veteran, receive a five week suspension.
Privacy

Submission + - Surveillance out of control in GB (guardian.co.uk) 1

An anonymous reader writes: The machine is out of control. Personal surveillance in Britain is so extensive that no democratic oversight is remotely plausible. Some 800 organizations, including the police, the revenue, local and central government, demanded (and almost always got) 253,000 intrusions on citizen privacy in the last recorded year, 2006. This is way beyond that of any other country in the free world.
Media

Apple Updates iPhone and iPod Touch 316

u-bend writes "With little publicity Apple has released new, higher-capacity models of the iPhone and iPod Touch. The new iPhone boasts 16 GB of storage and is priced at $499 (the 8 GB model remains at $399), and the new iPod Touch has 32 GB, also priced at $499. Although the price is still pretty hefty, it indicates that the capacity/price ratio on these wireless flash-based players is starting to move in the right direction."

Beware of "Backspaceware" 257

SubLevel writes "Since conception in 2004, Paint.NET has been generously been offering the software community the taste of successful freeware, by allowing anyone to download and decipher the entire working of their extremely popular photo editing program. As posted in the Official Paint.NET blog by Rick Brewster, "Backspaceware" as he has so coined has become a tremendous issue. "Paint.NET's license is very generous, and I even release the source code. All free of charge. Unfortunately it gets taken advantage of every once in awhile by scum who are trying to profit from the work of others. I like to call this backspaceware*. They download the source code for something, load it up in to Visual Studio (or whatever), hit the backspace key over the software's name and credits, type in a new name and author, and re-release it. They send it to all the download mirror sites, and don't always do a good job covering up their tracks.""

Apple's OS X Leopard In Depth 624

jcatcw writes "Computerworld begins its Week of Leopard with an in-depth review and image gallery covering Apple's newest version of OS X. Is it worth the wait? Well, Yes. It trumps Vista, of course; the Finder, Quick Look and Cover Flow provide better functionality and eye candy; Time Machine is the biggest undelete ever and the restore function is one of the coolest things we've ever seen; it has iChat; and has lots of updates under the hood. The answer might be no if you're lacking in the hardware department - an FAQ on how to get ready for the new version will help."
Privacy

Submission + - Time to encrypt all P2P traffic? 3

VORNAN-20 writes: Yesterday's item here about Comcast screwing around with P2P traffic brings up an idea. Is it time to change the P2P standard to encrypt all traffic? I think that almost any current PC would have no problem handling the extra load, and really, Comcast or any ISP has no business knowing what you are sending in the first place. I am not a network guy but I think that this is doable. If azureus, ktorrent, etc were all to come out with an "encrypt all packets using " option maybe this could be managed quickly and cleanly. It would be best to move quickly before all of the ISPs catch on to this. Come on developers, liberate us from the network meanies!!
The Media

Submission + - Apple offers $100 credit to iPhone customers

warrior_s writes: From NYTimes: Apple Inc. will offer a $100 store credit to people who bought the iPhone before the company slashed the price by $200, the company's chief executive, Steven P. Jobs, said in a statement today.
Here is Steven P. Jobs's Letter to Customers The offer applies to customers who bought iPhones at either Apple or AT&T stores and who are not receiving a rebate or other consideration.

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