Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:No RSS/Quick download? (Score 1) 13

Awesome, thanks a bunch! I tried using wget and recursive download, but I got a 403 error. I tried using the talks download page as a referrer, but it still gave me the 403. (And yes, I remembered the different spelling of referrer in the HTML standards.) I saw nothing in the source of the page, and I'm pretty sure I've got all the options and URL's right. Any insights?
Idle

Man Fails High School Exams For 38th Straight Year 5

You can call Shiv Charan simple, foolish, or just plain stupid if you want. The one thing you can't call him is a quitter. Starting in 1969, Shiv has devoted his life to passing India's year 10 exam. Since then he has taken the test every year except two (to study, I guess), and has failed every time. He has vowed not to marry until he can pass the test and is still single, which is now his main motivation. "As long as I am alive I will go on giving examinations in order to get a wife. For me, success is not merely about clearing the examinations. It will also throw open the doors of marriage," he said. By now Shiv must have the most impressive collection of prom wear in all of Asia. It seems like he'd pass just so he wouldn't have to dance to Alphaville's Forever young again.
Image

Fairytales Now Need a Safety Warning Screenshot-sm 3

A new child protection curriculum being implemented by the Education Department in Australia urges teachers to give children safety messages after reading them fairytales. The goal is to make sure that children understand not to engage in unsafe behaviors such as talking to strangers like Little Red Riding Hood and not to enter strange houses like Hansel and Gretel. While I can see the value in teaching kids not to talk to strangers, I want my kids to know that is is perfectly acceptable to push any elderly cannibal into an oven should they be kidnapped and kept in cages.
Toys

Submission + - Self-Healing Rubber Invented

SBJ95 writes: Researchers in France have discovered a way to make self-healing rubber out of vegetable oil and a substance found in urine. From Ars Technica:
"Even when completely cut with a razor, bringing the free ends together for 15 minutes at room temperature is enough to allow them to reconnect. The site of self-repair can be stretched to double its normal length without breaking. Best yet, the material is only a few simple chemical reactions away from vegetable oil. All that's missing is a catchy name for it." According to the BBC, the company which funded the research is looking to see if the product can be sold.
Hardware Hacking

Oil Soaked Servers Coming Soon 321

grease_boy writes "A UK company will start selling server racks submerged in oil baths within a year. Very-PC is working on prototypes and says that because oil transfers heat more efficiently, power usage can be cut by fifty percent."
Intel

Submission + - Q&A with Intel's vp of global marketing

bizwriter writes: "It's a bit self-serving, but I have a Q&A with Intel's vice president of global marketing on how consumer acceptance of technology is forcing the company to change how it markets and sells."
Debian

Submission + - Ubuntu in 2007: To the server side and beyond?

OSS_ilation writes: As the launch of Ubuntu "Feisty Fawn" 7.04 draws near, proponents of the Linux operating system are predicting much wider adoption of it in server environments. The target appears to be Redmond. Enterprise adoption has been a long term goal of Mark Shuttleworth and company at Canonical Ltd., but until this latest release Ubuntu was content as one the most popular Linux desktop distributions out there. That could change however, as a perfect storm of sorts lines up for Ubuntu over the course of the year. Fawn boasts new virtualization support, LTSP (thin client support added in Edgy Eft), and a renewed effort from corporate maintainer Canonical to get the OS into developing countries and governments that desire a free and open infrastructure for their constituencies. It's a more robust OS than it once was, but will that be enough to take market share from Microsoft?
Handhelds

Submission + - Official: Palm to go Linux

jetkins writes: The Melbourne Age reports that company officials announced Tuesday that Palm will move to a new Linux-based platform "to help the company compete better." According to The Age the move was announced "during a meeting with analysts in New York, where they also discussed the company's business strategy and refused to talk about recent rumors of a possible buyout."

Feed Orange punts two year lock-in (theregister.com)

Puts brakes on handset replacement cycle

Orange UK has launched 24 month contracts and SIM-only deals offering more texts and voice minutes if users hold onto their handsets for two years.


Slashdot Top Deals

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

Working...