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NASA

Submission + - Greenland Ice Melt Is Actually An Expected, Routine Event (foxnews.com)

swan5566 writes: After NASA issued a report that Greenland is currently experiencing “unprecedented” melting this year, glaciologists have now come back saying that this phenomenon was expected, and not due to man-made global warming. The last such occurrence happened in 1889, and is on about a 150-year cycle. Yet another log in the fire for the climate change debate.
Google

Submission + - Google scrambles to restore Google Talk from outage (networkworld.com) 1

alphadogg writes: Google Talk, a desktop and mobile text and voice chat service used by many Google Gmail customers, suffered a widespread outage Thursday morning that the company said was affecting "a majority of users." The outage, first reported by Google a little before 7am eastern time, was being restored about 4 hours later, according to Google. Meanwhile, users of the downed cloud service took to Twitter and other avenues to voice their displeasure.
Printer

Submission + - The world's first 3D-printed gun (extremetech.com) 1

MrSeb writes: "An American gunsmith has become the first person to construct and shoot a pistol partly made out of plastic, 3D-printed parts. The creator, who goes by the name HaveBlue and is an AR-15/M16 enthusiast, has reportedly fired 200 rounds with his part-plastic pistol without any sign of wear and tear. HaveBlue’s custom creation is a .22-caliber pistol, formed from a 3D-printed AR-15 (M16) lower receiver, and a normal, commercial upper. In other words, the main body of the gun is plastic, while the chamber — where the bullets are actually struck — is solid metal. While this pistol obviously wasn’t created from scratch using a 3D printer, the interesting thing is that the lower receiver — in a legal sense at least — is what actually constitutes a firearm. This means that people without gun licenses — or people who have had their licenses revoked — could print their own lower receiver and build a complete, off-the-books gun."
Medicine

Submission + - New Chemical Restores Vision, Raises Hopes (medicaldaily.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A chemical that can temporarily restore vision has been found. Researchers say that someday this chemical might be able to restore vision in people who suffer from diseases like retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration. In both diseases, the light-sensitive cells in the retina die causing vision loss.
The chemical called AAQ (acrylamide-azobenzene-quaternary ammonium) works by re-sensitizing the "blind cells" in the retina to light. The chemical binds to the protein ion channel in the retinal cells and alters the flow of ions through these channels just like a beam of light would.

IT

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Dealing with harassment and uncomfortable behavior 1

zwei2stein writes: My team of about 10 men (IT guys) is expecting new coleague: Female one. It is guaranteed, that there will be remarks, double entendres and inuendos with huge potential of getting worse. We already have woman in team which can somehow handle this (and deliver apropriate verbal slaps). How would you deal with this? We talked about some fun ways — anyone who will do this will have to wear embarassing tie, simple ways — instead of swear jar, having sexual innuendo jar and even fairly harsh punishments — people losing their bonuses for month or their extra vaccation days. I'd like to figure out solution that would be effective, not call much attention to itself and not abandoned quickly.
China

Submission + - Chinese Authorities arrest thousands over cyber-crime charges (paritynews.com)

hypnosec writes: China is currently taking a tough stance against criminals involved in online crimes and the authorities have busted more than 600 gangs and arrested over 10,000 suspects as of June for crimes such as spreading lewd content, dealing in arms and collecting citizens' personal information illegally. The Ministry of Public Security said in a statement that as many as 3.2 million "harmful" online messages have been deleted and over 60 websites and online forums have been ordered to remove inappropriate content with 30 ISPs being punished for granting network access to unlicensed websites. The campaign also targeted pornography and the illegal sale of personal details.

Submission + - Remote Root Exploit in Kindle Touch

93 Escort Wagon writes: This week's SANS Consensus Security Vulnerability email reports there's a remote root exploit on the Kindle Touch, thanks to its NPAPI support, served with a side of full root privileges.

NPAPI support was newly introduced on the Touch with software update 5.1.0. I don't own a Kindle Touch, but if it's anything like my Kindle 3 — I can't imagine too many people are using its web browser. But still...
Desktops (Apple)

Submission + - New Mac Trojan Installs Silently, No Password Required

An anonymous reader writes: A new Mac OS X Trojan referred to as OSX/Crisis silently infects OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard and OS X 10.7 Lion. The backdoor component calls home to the IP address 176.58.100.37 every five minutes, awaiting instructions. The threat was created in a way that is intended to make reverse engineering more difficult, an added extra that is more common with Windows malware than it is with Mac malware.
Networking

Submission + - Comcast Launches Superfast Internet To Fight FiOS (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: "Comcast customers who dream of superfast download speeds drooled when they heard the company would be offering 305 Mbps service. There's only one catch: the high speeds are only available in markets where the cable giant is going head-to-head with Verizon's FiOS service. It seems that competition really does improve service quality when it comes to ISPs."
Facebook

Submission + - Facebook Q2 Earnings Call: What to Expect (ibtimes.co.uk)

AlistairCharlton writes: Facebook is set to announce its second quarter financial results tonight, its first earnings call since floating as a public company in May.

After booking a $1.1bn (£710m) charge for share-based payouts to staff and early investors when the company went public, Facebook is forecast to report a $673m loss before tax by its lead bank Morgan Stanley, according to the Guardian.

Wireless Networking

Submission + - Nokia Aborts Meltemi Linux-Based Feature Phone (techweekeurope.co.uk)

judgecorp writes: "Nokia has closed down the Meltemi low-end Linux phone which was supposed to replace its System 40 devices. The platform had never been officially announced and now, apparently, will never see the light of day. Feature phones still make up a giant market where Nokia has dominated, but this leaves its upgrade path in question."
Security

Submission + - Researcher wows Black Hat with NFC-based smartphone hacking demo (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: At the Black Hat Conference in Las Vegas Wednesday, Accuvant Labs researcher Charlie Miller showed how he figured out a way to break into both the Google/Samsung Nexus S and Nokia N9 by means of the Near Field Communication (NFC) capability in the smartphones. NFC is still new but it’s starting to become adopted for use in smartphone-based purchasing in particular. The experimentation that Miller did, which he demonstrated at the event, showed it’s possible to set up NFC-based radio communication to share content with the smartphones to play tricks, such as writing an exploit to crash phones and even in certain circumstances read files on the phone and more.

Submission + - Microsoft patents Linux servers

dgharmon writes: Microsoft’s crusade to lock Linux companies into patent protection deals has netted Redmond’s first service provider.

Amdocs Software Systems is paying Microsoft to license undisclosed Redmond patents in a deal that "provides mutual access to each company’s patent portfolio".

The deal extends to the Linux servers running in Amdoc’s data centres, with the unidentified boxes receiving a licence under Microsoft’s patent portfolio. Specific terms of the deal were not announced, including how much Amdocs will pay Microsoft.

Submission + - Spanish superjudge to represent Assange (guardian.co.uk)

ccguy writes: Spanish ex-judge Balsazar Garzón will represent wikileak's Julian Assange in his extradiction case.
In the past 30 years Garzón has led the most important investigations in Spain: Against drug cartels, against terrorist groups (ETA), and against corruption. He's also famous for his attempt to extradite Chilean dictator Pinochet to Spain to judge him for crimes against humanity.
In his last investigation Garzón ordered in-prison conversations between corrupt politicians and their lawyers to be monitored. This is legal in Spain if the goal is to prevent further crimes to be committed (such as the inmate telling his lawyer to destroy evidence, or offshore funds). This caused Garzón to be disbarred as a judge. The president of the Supreme Court that signed this disbarment (Carlos Dívar) has later on made to resign, after it was discovered that he used taxpayers money for deluxe vacations.

Submission + - Resurrect your old code with a DIY Punch Card Reader (blogspot.co.nz)

mchnz writes: Need to read in some old punch cards? Have a hankering to return to yesteryear? I've combined an Arduino, the CHDK enhanced firmware for Canon cameras, and the Python Image Library to build a reader for standard IBM 80 column punch cards. You can see it in action in "Punch Card Reader — The Movie" or read more about it in my blog.

Submission + - biodiversity in a large number of tropical forests still declining (bbc.co.uk)

Dupple writes: Despite having protected status, the biodiversity in a large number of tropical forests is still continuing to decline, a study has suggested.

The authors said the findings should cause concern because the areas have been seen as a final refuge for a number of threatened species.

Habitat disruption, hunting and timber exploitation have been seen as signs of future decline, they added.

The findings have been published online by the science journal Nature.

"The rapid disruption of tropical forests probably imperils global biodiversity more than any other contemporary phenomenon," the international team of research wrote.

Microsoft

Submission + - OpenBSD's de Raadt slams Red Hat, Canonical over 'secure' boot (itwire.com)

An anonymous reader writes: OpenBSD founder Theo de Raadt has slammed Red Hat and Canonical for the way they have reacted to Microsoft's introduction of "secure" boot along with Windows 8, describing both companies as wanting to be the new Microsoft.

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