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forgotten_my_nick (802929)

forgotten_my_nick
  (email not shown publicly)

  Games: Blizzard Announces Diablo 3 2008-06-28 09:09

Posted by CowboyNeal on Saturday June 28, @09:09AM
from the mouse-buttons-beware dept.
stpk4 writes "After a week-long tease by Blizzard, Diablo 3 has just been announced in Paris. The splash screen has been updated at their homepage and The Escapist has the first write-up." While there aren't many details available yet, it is known that Deckard Cain returns to help our heroes yet again.
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 [+] story, games, rpg, blizzard, pcgames, sweet
Posted by kdawson on Tuesday June 10, @06:03AM
from the evolving-ecosystem dept.
jexrand recommends an interview with John De Goes in which he argues: "The tools market is dead. Open source killed it." The software developer turned president of N-BRAIN explains the effect that open source has had on the developer tools market, and how this forced the company to release the personal edition of UNA free of charge. According to De Goes, selling a source-code editor, even a very good one, is all but impossible in the post-open source era, especially given that, "Some developers would rather quit their job than be forced to use a new editor or IDE." N-BRAIN's decision is but one in a string of similar announcements from tools companies announcing the free release of their previously commercial development tools.
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 [+] story, tech, programming, gnu, crymeariver, good, opensource
Posted by Zonk on Tuesday March 18, @01:22PM
from the anything-but-haskell dept.
simoniker writes "Over at Dobbs Code Talk, Chris Diggins has been discussing programming languages beyond C++ or Java, suggesting options such as Ruby ('does a great job of showing how powerful a dynamic language can be, and leverages powerful ideas from Smalltalk, Perl, and Lisp') but suggesting Scala as a first choice ('Very accessible to programmers from different backgrounds.') What would your choice be for programmers extending beyond their normal boundaries?"
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 [+] story, it, programming, lisp, objectivec, c, iphone
Posted by Zonk on Tuesday March 18, @08:44AM
from the you're-blocking-the-view-of-the-big-game dept.
S1mmo+61 writes "Salon is analyzing a Time Magazine article today, a piece that essentially claims Americans do not care about the domestic spying. The analysis of the Time magazine piece (which is longer than the article itself) is interesting, if only as a quick history of domestic spying in the last eight years. 'Time claims that "nobody cares" about the Government's increased spying powers and that "polling consistently supports that conclusion." They don't cite a single poll because that assertion is blatantly false. Just this weekend, a new poll released by Scripps Howard News Service and Ohio University proves that exactly the opposite is true. That poll shows that the percentage of Americans who believe the Federal Government is "very secretive" has doubled in the last two years alone (to 44%)'"
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 [+] story, yro, privacy, government, politics, usa, antipropaganda
Posted by Zonk on Thursday March 13, @04:04PM
from the who-wouldn't-love-those-scamps dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Passing the Turing test is the holy grail of artificial intelligence (AI) and now researchers claim it may be possible using the world's fastest supercomputer (IBM's Blue Gene). This version of the Turing test pits a human conversing with a synthetic character powered by Rascals software crafted at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. RPI is aiming to pass AI's final exam this fall, by pairing the most powerful university-based supercomputing system in the world with its new multimedia group which is designing a holodeck, a la Star Trek."
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 [+] story, software, scifi, technology, intelligence, skynet
Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 02, @10:42AM
from the totally-nonsensationalist-headline dept.
superbrose writes "According to MSNBC, thousands of U.S. citizens have wrongfully been declared dead, due to an average of 35 data input errors per day by the Social Security Administration (SSA). Many other agencies rely on the data provided by the SSA, such as the IRS. People who have been wrongfully declared dead face many problems, such as rejection of tax returns, cancellation of health insurance, and closure of bank accounts. The article states, 'Input of an erroneous death entry can lead to benefit termination and result in financial hardship for a beneficiary.' Apparently it is far easier to declare a person's death than it is to correct the mistake. It continues, 'Social Security says an erroneous death record can be removed only when it is presented with proof that the original record was entered in error. The original error must be documented, and the deletion must be approved by a supervisor after "pertinent facts supporting reinstatement" are available in the system.'"
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 [+] story, it, government, !deadyet, hesdeadjim, stillalive

  Web Ads Work Better Than TV Ads 2007-12-26 22:05

Posted by samzenpus on Wednesday December 26 2007, @10:05PM
from the target-market dept.
Fohootville, We Hate You writes "According to a new study, Internet advertisements work better than television advertisements. Internet video watchers were reported to be 47 percent more "engaged" by the advertising they watched than were traditional TV viewers. The report does not mention whether pornographic internet advertisements were included in the study."
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 [+] story, media, money, punchthemonkey, bull, pr0n
Posted by Zonk on Friday December 14 2007, @11:22AM
from the and-is-that-a-bad-thing dept.
StonyandCher has passed us a link to PCWorld.au, once again raising the tough topic of work/life separation. A department of the Australian government went ahead with a purchase of dozens of Blackberry communication devices, but is now delaying their deployment. The reason: "Staff expressed fears about BlackBerries contributing to a longer working day and felt it was going a step too far because mobile phones are adequate for out-of-office contact. Not everyone agreed, however, with some senior executives claiming a BlackBerry can contribute to work/life balance by facilitating telecommuting and more flexible schedules. " For the time being this issue is on hold for those staffers, but how does this issue fall for you? Is constant accessibility freeing or just another chain around your neck?
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 [+] story, mobile, handheld, crackberry, communications, it, chain
Posted by Zonk on Thursday September 20 2007, @06:01PM
from the very-glad-this-is-over dept.
certain death writes "Daniel Lyons of Forbes Magazine has admitted to being snowed by SCO, regarding their lawsuit over Linux and SCO code. He specifically mentions Groklaw's role in the case, and regrets his early articles giving the company the benefit of the doubt. 'I still thought it would be foolish to predict how this lawsuit (or any lawsuit) would play out. I even wrote an article called "Revenge of the Nerds," which poked fun at the pack of amateur sleuths who were following the case on a Web site called Groklaw and who claimed to know for sure that SCO was going to lose. Turns out those amateur sleuths were right. Now some of them are writing to me asking how I'd like my crow cooked, and where I'd like it delivered. Others in that highly partisan crowd have suggested that I wanted SCO to win, and even that I was paid off by SCO or Microsoft. Of course that's not true. I've told these folks it's not true. Hasn't stopped them. The truth, as is often the case, is far less exciting than the conspiracy theorists would like to believe. It is simply this: I got it wrong. The nerds got it right.'"
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 [+] story, linux, caldera, court, media, fakesteve
Posted by kdawson on Monday July 30 2007, @09:07PM
from the longest-serving-republican dept.
A while back we discussed the corruption investigation aimed at Alaska Sen. Ted "series of tubes" Stevens. A number of readers sent us word that the home of Sen. Stevens was raided earlier today by agents of the FBI and the IRS. The focus of the raid was a remodeling project at Stevens's home and the involvement of VECO, an oil company.
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 [+] story, politics, slashback, corruption, fbi, senate, tedstevens, tubes
Submitted by AF on Friday June 15 2007, @06:57AM
AF writes "This video discusses how the days of widespread internet attacks are long gone. What's more popular now are more directed or targeted attacks using a variety of different methods. This is where data seepage comes in. Unbeknownst to a lot of mobile professional's laptops, PDAs, even cell phones can be literally bleeding information about a company's internal network. All this information can be used by an attacker to make attacks more accurate with a higher likelihood of success."
http://www.net-security.org/article.php?id=1015
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 [+] submission, it, security

  OSS released as free software 2007-06-15 06:53 Robert Millan

Submitted by Robert Millan on Friday June 15 2007, @06:53AM
Robert Millan writes "As mentioned earlier in the OpenSolaris lists, 4FRONT has finally released the Open Sound System as free software under dual GPL/CDDL license. Press release available here."
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 [+] submission, linux, software

  Brits Trust the Crowd More than Pros[->] 2007-06-15 06:03 ecacofonix

Submitted by ecacofonix on Friday June 15 2007, @06:03AM
ecacofonix writes "A survey reveals that most British rely on peer reviews rather than travel agents. It claims that Brits prefer to trust complete strangers for researching and booking holidays. Peer reviews becoming influential, with 1 in 6 posting a review after a holiday and 71 per cent trusting their fellow travellers' opinions, even though they had never met. More from here @ Trazoo"
http://www.trazoo.com/b/2007/06/brits-trust-crowd-more-than-pros.html
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 [+] submission, internet
Submitted by andyteleco on Friday June 15 2007, @05:54AM
andyteleco writes "Here's a little episode from the money-makes-the-world-go-round department. Google on Monday announced an alternative Google Checkout party with free food & massages at the side of an eBay event — likely to lure away sellers (Checkout is a competitor to eBay-owned PayPal): Are you an online seller attending eBay Live! in Boston this week? If so, join us for a celebration of user choice at the Google Checkout Freedom Party on Thursday night This didn't bode so well with eBay, who, according to Valleywag, reacted by withdrawing AdWords ads on Google. And now, in a new blog post Google says that after "speaking with officials at eBay, we ... agreed that it was better for us not to feature this event." (The post doesn't elaborate on the reasons, except that Google "did not want to detract from" the eBay Live event — as often with official company blogs, they hide more than they reveal when it comes to sensitive issues.) From: http://blog.outer-court.com/archive/2007-06-13.htm l#n11"
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 [+] submission, it, google
Posted by Zonk on Thursday April 05 2007, @09:14AM
from the when-will-it-end dept.
Litigious Bastards writes "SCO has just filed court papers saying that they were unable to subpoena PJ of Groklaw. While they apparently sent their crack team of process servers out looking for random people named Pamela Jones, it would appear that they were unable to locate the bright yellow envelope labeled 'Email PJ' on the Groklaw website to ask for directions to serve her in person. They're once again accusing her of working for IBM or Novell, and Groklaw is now hosting over 20 documents PJ claims were planted in the media in an effort to discredit her. As she says, 'And so the stupidest lawsuit in the history of the world just got stupider. And a whole lot meaner.'"
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 [+] story, yro, court, sco, slashdotted, caldera, ibm