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clem (5683)

clem
  (email not shown publicly)
http://outintheblack.blogspot.com/
by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo on Friday July 18, @07:03PM (#24244479)
Attached to: AMD Loses $1.2 Billion and Its CEO
Thank heavens for the second amendment!
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by nuzak on Monday May 19, @06:03PM (#23465144)
Attached to: Age of Conan's "Kinda" Launch and Massive Pre-Orders
Refresh my memory, which MMO does Valve run?

Hey mods, fuck you.
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Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday February 27, @01:07PM
from the vote-early-vote-often dept.
samzenpus writes "With all the scrutiny that Diebold has received in past few years you'd think that they would be more careful but apparently due to a malfunction in some machines, they have leaked the results to the 2008 presidential race early. Hopefully this will be the nail in Diebold's coffin. Surely we have another company in this country that can run a sham election better."
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 [+] story, politics, humor, lame, fake, theonion, onion, spoileralert
Posted by Zonk on Tuesday January 29, @02:22PM
from the duh-obviously-the-fairchild dept.
The C|Net Crave blog has up an article exploring the history of console gaming, and wonders aloud about the pecking order of the various systems. "Gaming is so subjective that there is no single "greatest" system ever. It might sound like a cop-out, but it really depends on what standards you're using and what generation you grew up in. I loved the SNES, and would personally call it the greatest system of all time. However, the NES and PlayStation could both easily be called the best, based on the standards they set and the advances they presented to gaming." The Guardian follows up this piece, noting that the article's rose-colored recollections of the SNES days may not be entirely accurate. Subjective or not, it's a good question: which consoles have a valid place in history and which ones should be forgotten?
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 [+] story, games, wii, nes, snes, playstation
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday September 07 2007, @01:14PM
from the more-success-quantum-theory-has-the-sillier-it-looks dept.
Stony Stevenson writes to tell us that University of Michigan physicists have been able to establish an "entanglement" between two atoms trapped more than a meter apart in different enclosures using light. This shows how two different atoms can have a sort of communication, something Einstein referred to as 'spooky action-at-a-distance'. "By manipulating the photons emitted from each of the two atoms and guiding them to interact along a fibre-optic thread, the researchers were able to detect the resulting photon clicks and entangle the atoms. Professor Monroe explained that the fibre-optic thread was necessary to establish entanglement of the atoms. But the fibre could be severed and the two atoms would remain entangled, even if one were 'carefully taken to Jupiter'."
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 [+] story, science, networking, ansible, appalachianstate, einstein
From feed by sdfeed on Thursday August 02 2007, @02:13PM
A preliminary study of 85 patients with bipolar disorder shows that a drug used to treat patients with sleep disorders might also control the depressive symptoms associated with bipolar disorder. At least 44 percent of the participants in the study reported improved symptoms, a noteworthy improvement for a disorder in which new treatments are needed.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/08/070802132212.htm
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Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday July 18 2007, @10:07PM
from the this-worked-in-a-different-timeline dept.
smooth wombat writes "Travelling to a time in the past is, as far as we know, not possible. However, Einstein postulated a faster-than-light effect known as 'spooky action at a distance'. The problem is, how do you test for such an effect? That test may now be here. If all goes well, hopefully by September 15th, John Cramer will have experimented with a beam of laser light which has been split in two to test Einstein's idea. While he is only testing the quantum entanglement portion, changing one light beam and having the same change made in the other beam, his experiment might show that a change made in one beam shows up in the other beam before he actually makes the change."
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 [+] story, science, education, einstein, physics, unlikely
Posted by Cliff on Thursday May 10 2007, @09:27AM
from the is-there-a-b0fh-near-you dept.
tgbrittai asks: "According to Paul Boutin they are merely an obstacle to be manipulated or outmaneuvered. According to Steve Wozniak they are pimps. I've known my share of good and bad sysadmins, programmers and every other professional role out there, and I have to wonder: are sysadmins really THAT bad?" Most times sys-admins are overworked and underpaid and have to deal with users who take advantage of their local IT person, tasking them to fix systems that they callously break. Others are truly worth the name "Bastard Operators from Hell". How would you rate your sys-admin and what things did you have to do to make things run smoothly (or not)?
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 [+] story, askslashdot, humor, it, bofh
Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday April 18 2007, @10:20AM
from the i'll-tell-you-where-you-can-put-it dept.
HHL3T writes "CoolTechZone.com has published a review of the Linux-based Nokia N800 Internet Tablet that was announced at CES 2007 back in January. The review concludes, "As it currently stands, the N800 is an absolutely amazing product for web browsing. However, it's targeted at a very exclusive market: pure technology admirers who must have the latest and greatest, regardless of its real world functionality. We wouldn't recommend you place all of your critical information on the N800, due to its limited online connectivity options and lack of a portable form factor, especially if you are a professional. But if you must have the N800, we would recommend only using it as a digital newspaper to stay abreast on the latest news, and get work done online. It's just too much of an independent platform to be able to replace anything else, such as a notebook, a smartphone or a cell phone."
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 [+] story, hardware, portables, linux, slashdotted
Posted by Hemos on Tuesday March 06 2007, @12:44PM
from the relativity-also-out dept.
Ant writes "Neatorama lists nine laws of physics that don't apply in Hollywood (movies and television/TV shows). In general, Hollywood filmmakers follow the laws of physics because they have no other choice. It's just when they cheat with special effects that people seem to forget how the world really works..."
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 [+] story, science, movies, slashdotted, scifi, physics
Posted by samzenpus on Thursday November 16 2006, @08:40AM
from the environmental-update dept.
An anonymous reader writes "According to this article, Microsoft is only a few lines of code away from becoming the greenest company on Earth." From the article: "Redmond should issue a software upgrade to every computer running Microsoft Windows worldwide to adjust each machine's energy-saving settings for maximum efficiency." The author figures that the upgrade would affect 100 million computers and that the power cost savings could hit $7 billion per year. CO2 emissions would be cut by 45 million tons. But what about the impact on computing?
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 [+] story, hardware, power, globalwarming, co2, green, climatechange, microsoft