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Comment: Re:"windows" article tag biased (Score 1) 408

by sebisor (#27031319) Attached to: Obama Helicopter Security Breached By File Sharing

This should not be moderated insighful.

You mention limewire but you also state clearly
that limewire is sharing music by default. Unless the top secret files are accessible as music files, how exactely is your comentary relevant?

And exactely how dumb should the security system in place at the contractor be in order to grant access to your super-secret files on the same PC that you use to share your music files on the net.. not to mention, running windows!

Software

Linux devicemaker sued in first U.S. test of GPL

Submitted by
An anonymous reader writes "For the first time in the U.S., a company is being taken to court for a GPL violation. The Software Freedom Law Center has sued Monsoon Multimedia over alleged GPL violations in the Hava, a place- and time-shifting TV recorder similar to the SlingBox. Interestingly, Monsoon Multimedia is run by a highly experienced international lawyer named Graham Radstone. According to his corporate biography, Radstone has an MA in Law from the University of Cambridge, England, and held the top legal spot at an unnamed "$1 billion private multinational company." He also reportedly held top management positions with Philip Morris, Pfizer, and DHL. Sounds like the makings of a good old legal donnybrook ahead."
Biotech

Cure for cancer may be ready in two years->

Submitted by GnarlyDoug
GnarlyDoug writes "Dr Zheng Cui has, through a stroke of luck, found that the granulocytes from some mice are up to 50 times better at fighting cancer than others. He has cured mice with simple transfusions of granulocytes. These cells seem to recognize almost all cancer lines, are extremely effective even in advanced cases, and and the resistance seems to last for the life of the mouse. So not only does this treatment cure many cancers, but it also provides resistance to future cancers as well.

Evidence suggests that this should hold true for humans as well. Because this is based on blood transfusions, a technology already long established, this could be ready to so very soon. The go-ahead for a human trial has already been given, and if it pans out then this could be available in as little as two years time. Some simple tests to find people with the resistant strain of blood and then a system of transfusions is all that is needed to get this started.

If it pans out, we may be looking at a general cure for cancer within a few years time."

Link to Original Source
Privacy

U.S. Airport Screeners Are Watching What You Read 484

Posted by Zonk
from the just-forget-about-rights dept.
boarder8925 writes "Be careful what you read when you fly in the United States. What you read is being monitored by airport screeners and stored in a government database for years. 'Privacy advocates obtained database records showing that the government routinely records the race of people pulled aside for extra screening as they enter the country, along with cursory answers given to U.S. border inspectors about their purpose in traveling. In one case, the records note Electronic Frontier Foundation co-founder John Gilmore's choice of reading material, and worry over the number of small flashlights he'd packed for the trip. The breadth of the information obtained by the Gilmore-funded Identity Project (using a Privacy Act request) shows the government's screening program at the border is actually a survelliance dragnet."
Networking (Apple)

Steve Jobs subpoenaed in backdating case

Submitted by Anonymous Coward
An anonymous reader writes "Apple CEO Steve Jobs has been subpoenaed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to give a deposition in the stock option backdating lawsuit against former Apple General Counsel, Nancy Heinen.Apple's backdating problems started in June 2006, when the company announced that an internal probe had found some irregularities in some option grants issued between 1997 and 2001. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/092007-steve-jobs-backdating-case.html"
Announcements

Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron) Release Dates Announced!

Submitted by techavenger
techavenger writes ""In addition to Ubuntu 6-months stable releases and the next version of ubuntu is 8.04 with Code Name 'Hardy Heron' but this release will proudly wear the badge of Long Term Support (LTS) and be supported with security updates for five years on the server and three years on the desktop. Hardy Heron was announced on Wednesday(29th August 2007) on the blog of Jono Bacon, the Ubuntu community manager for Canonical, the operating system's commercial sponsor. Now they announced the dates of the release of hardy heron,(what we all waited)."
Linux

Gartner Says Open Source "Impossible To Avoid" 167

Posted by kdawson
from the there-they-go-again dept.
alphadogg writes in with a Network World article that covers a Gartner open source conference, in which VP Mark Driver seems to be going out of his way to be provocative. "You can try to avoid open source, but it's probably easier to get out of the IT business altogether. By 2011, at least 80% of commercial software will contain significant amounts of open source code..." After this lead-in, in which open source seems to be regarded as some kind of communicable disease, the rest of the article outlines a perfectly rational plan for developing an open source strategy.
Power

Concentrating Solar Power has Bright Future

Submitted by
Hugh Pickens
Hugh Pickens writes "The world's biggest solar farm with more than 400,000 mirrors was built in the 1980's and still generates 354 megawatts, enough to power more than 900,000 houses. Now due to a federal energy credit, the enactment of renewable energy standards in many states, and public antipathy to coal fired power plants, large scale Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) is making a comeback. Scientific American reports that the first such plant to be built in decades started providing 64 megawatts of electricity to the neon lights of Vegas this summer. Although CSP proponents claim that a solar thermal power plant built on about 1% of the surface of the Sahara Desert would be sufficient to satisfy the entire world's electricity demand, a key problem has been energy storage during the night. One company, Ausra, claims to be solving the storage problem without using molten salts or other expensive means of conserving heat and estimates that the price of its electricity will drop to roughly 8 cents per kilowatt hour if it can store heat for 16 hours. Their system will employ pressure and a steam accumulator to accomplish the trick. "You allow some of the steam to recondense," a spokesman explains. "It flashes back to steam when you reduce the pressure just by opening the valve to the turbine.""

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