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Txiasaeia (581598)

Txiasaeia
  (email not shown publicly)
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday May 20, @03:11PM
from the take-two-aspirin-and-don't-call-me-ever dept.
Several readers noted that the limited pilot test of Google Health has ended, and Google is now offering the service to the public at large. Google Health allows patients to enter health information, such as conditions and prescriptions, find related medical information, and share information with their health care providers (at the patient's request). Information may be entered manually or imported from partnered health care providers. The service is offered free of charge, and Google won't be including advertising. The WSJ and the NYTimes provide details about Google's numerous health partners.
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 [+] story, tech, google, medicine, bigbrother, hipaa, privacy
Posted by kdawson on Sunday April 13, @03:06AM
from the score-one-for-the-mole dept.
Crymson4 writes "We discussed the shutdown of the Demonoid torrent tracker last fall. For those who don't already know, Demonoid is back up. Looks like they found a new host for the Web site and the tracker is functioning properly as well. For those with old accounts, all the old data has been saved. It's almost as if they never left."
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 [+] story, tech, internet, w00t, yay, bittorrent, honeypot
Posted by CmdrTaco on Monday March 17, @11:42AM
from the also-increased-chance-of-lohan dept.
buzzardsbay writes "Baseline is reporting on an upcoming survey from Symantec and Applied Research-West that confirms many suspicions about the generation gap in the workplace, namely that younger workers will use your corporate network to run most any device, technology or social networking software they can get their hands on. Dubbed "Millenials," these workers born after 1980 are nearly twice as likely to use cell phones and PDAs at work, and half admit to installing unauthorized software on their employer's computers. On the upside, the Millenials are more security aware than their older co-workers."
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 [+] story, it, security, getoffmylawn, getoffmylan, agefud
Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday March 05, @09:56PM
from the please-send-paris-hilton dept.
alexj33 writes "Will humans ever really go to Mars? Let's face it, the obstacles are quite daunting. Not only are there numerous, difficult, technical issues to overcome, but the political will and perseverance of any one nation to undertake such an arduous task is huge. However, one former NASA engineer believes a human mission to Mars is quite possible, and such an event would unify the world as never before. But Jim McLane's proposal includes a couple of major caveats: the trip to Mars should be one-way, and have a crew of only one person."
Posted by Zonk on Saturday February 16, @05:41PM
from the getting-late-in-the-day dept.
Jabbrwokk writes "Michael Geist reports legislation to create a Canadian version of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act has been delayed again, possibly because of massive public outcry, and possibly even because of opposition from the industry itself. Canada's biggest ISPs have banded together to oppose the proposed new legislation and suggest their own solution, which include allowances for expanded fair dealing, private copying, no liability for ISPs and legislation that concentrates its wrath on commercial pirates instead of penny-ante downloaders and seeders.'"
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday January 18 2008, @04:11PM
from the smells-like-... dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Animals use pheromones to attract each other for sex, and warn each other of danger. Now, Wired reports, military researchers are working to harness the 'human fear' pheromone to create a scent of terror. The pheromone could lead to smell-based terrorist sensors, and new weapons that rely on 'contagious' stress."
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 [+] story, science, military, thesmelloffear, terror, terrorism
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday January 14 2008, @02:04PM
from the all-your-veggies-are-belong-to-us dept.
palegray.net writes Robots.net covers an article about robotic exoskeletons for Japanese farmers. These exoskeletons would provide increased strength and support for manual labor intensive tasks. More information can also be found at robots-dreams.com. 'The robotic suit relies on ultrasonic motors along with various sensors and wireless networking gear. [...] The mass-produced version of the suit is expected to weigh in at 8 kilograms and cost about 200,000 yen.'"

  Games: Deus Ex 3 Announced 2007-11-26 14:33

Posted by Zonk on Monday November 26 2007, @02:33PM
from the machina-goes-without-saying dept.
Gamasutra has the news that Eidos is already hard at work on a Deus Ex 3 . The company announced this project along with a brand-new studio in Montreal, which will be developing the title. "According to [General Manager Stéphane D'Astous], Eidos Montreal currently has two groups -- a Q&A group that is responsible for testing all of the developer's games from anywhere in the world, and an in-house development team that D'Astous says has just passed proof of concept for Deus Ex 3. 'This game was very highly rated at its release in 2000, and we have this great huge mandate to do the third one, and everybody is very excited,' added D'Astous"
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 [+] story, games, pcgames, deusex3, justfixtwo, ispeeelmydrink, deusux2
Posted by CowboyNeal on Thursday November 01 2007, @09:53PM
from the term-papers-that-live-on dept.
openfrog writes "An inspired professor at University of Washington-Bothell, Martha Groom, made an interesting pedagogical experiment. Instead of vilifying Wikipedia as some academics are prone to do, she assigned the students enrolled in her environmental history course to contribute articles. The result has proven "transformative" to her students. They were no longer spending their time writing for one reader, says Groom, but were doing work of consequence in a "peer reviewed" environment, which enhanced the quality of their output."
Posted by CowboyNeal on Thursday October 04 2007, @08:14PM
from the finally-won-one dept.
jemtallon writes "The jury in the previously mentioned Captiol v Thomas story has reached a verdict. They have found in favor of the plaintiffs, Capitol, and ordered that she pay a $222,000 fine for 24 cases of copyright infringement."
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 [+] story, yro, court, mafiaa, fuck, haha, stealing, suckstobeyou
Posted by kdawson on Thursday July 19 2007, @11:18AM
from the 6,000-skulls dept.
Invisible Pink Unicorn writes "Researchers at the University of Cambridge have combined studies of global human genetic variations with skull measurements worldwide to show conclusively the validity of the single origin hypothesis. The alternative hypothesis contended that different populations independently evolved from Homo erectus to Home sapiens in different areas. The lead researcher explains, 'The origin of anatomically modern humans has been the focus of much heated debate. Our genetic research shows the further modern humans have migrated from Africa, the more genetic diversity has been lost within a population. However, some have used skull data to argue that modern humans originated in multiple spots around the world. We have combined our genetic data with new measurements of a large sample of skulls to show definitively that modern humans originated from a single area in Sub-saharan Africa.' The article abstract is available from Nature."
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 [+] story, science, biotech, creationalevolution, eden, adamandeve

  Microsoft open source?!? 2007-01-15 23:39 felix8257

Submitted by felix8257 on Monday January 15 2007, @11:39PM
felix8257 writes "So, earlier today this farce of a company, called Aras, claims to have open sourced its apps... a step in the right direction, except that they're all Microsoft, all the time. They even call themselves Microsoft enterprise open source. As if there is such a thing! Peter Galli at eWeek reports on the nature of this marketing play in Aras Move Puts New Spin on Open Source. Apparently, they even chose to use one of the Microsoft licenses and not the GPL. Reason given is to avoid 'required contributions'. This has all the signs of pure, unadulterated BS."
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 [+] submission, developers, microsoft

  Time for a different terminal emulator? 2007-01-15 23:37 swankjesse

Submitted by swankjesse on Monday January 15 2007, @11:37PM
swankjesse writes "I spend a lot of time at the command line, so a good terminal emulator is important to me. Unfortunately, the default ones all have some annoyances:
Konsole inserts extra newline characters in the output, which makes it labour-intensive to do cut-and-paste.
Gnome Terminal doesn't let me scroll back while output is being generated.
Terminal.app doesn't have tabs, so I'm constantly having to search for my window. And it's Mac-only.

So I started searching for a better terminal emulator. The most interesting thus far is Terminator. It's got horizontal scrolling, which is ideal for SQL. And it gets the details right: scrollback, wrapping, fonts and keyboard shortcuts Just Work.

What's terminal emulator do you use? What does it do better?"
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 [+] submission, linux, software
Posted by kdawson on Monday January 15 2007, @08:06PM
from the victorians-rejoice dept.
fmackay writes "Neal Stephenson's novel The Diamond Age is to be adapted for a Sci Fi Channel miniseries. George Clooney is producing and Stephenson will write the screenplay — the first time he has written for television."
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 [+] story, it, tv, books, scifi, ent,