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Comment Atlantis' First Last Flight (Score 3, Informative) 143

This is probably Atlantis' last flight. However:

When she lands later this month, Atlantis won't be mothballed. She'll be put back in the standard post-flight turnaround process to ready her for the Launch On Need (LON) mission STS-335, intended to provide rescue capability if necessary for the last currently scheduled shuttle mission, Endeavor's STS-134. It has been pointed out that, assuming all goes well on STS-134, there will be a bought-and-paid-for STS stack checked out and ready to go... why not use it? STS-335 would become STS-135, and would fly next year with a four-person crew to the ISS, delivering a Multi-Purpose Logistics Module and extra supplies and equipment. Russian Soyuz ships would be used if rescue became necessary.

Source.
Apple

Submission + - Customer Banned For Life From Purchasing iPads (protocolsnow.com)

TrekkieTechie writes: The Consumerist is reporting on a technology enthusiast and blogger who will never again be allowed to buy an iPad. Why? Apparently, if store employees suspect you of being a scalper (buying and reselling marked-up iPads online for your own profit), they can and will issue a lifetime ban. If you're curious how many iPads you're allowed to purchase before they cut you off, "that information is not available".

Submission + - The Gary Gygax Memorial (escapistmagazine.com)

Allen Varney writes: My Escapist article 'The Tower of Gygax: Honoring the man who started everything' outlines efforts to build a monument to D&D co-creator Gary Gygax in his home town, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Two squabbling factions of Gygax's heirs, who get along like the Judean People's Front and the People's Front of Judea, have independent projects. They've reached a truce, but they don't yet have a site or a final design.
Apple

Submission + - Apple Hires Engineer for Wearable Computers (computerworld.com)

CWmike writes: Richard DeVaul's LinkedIn status changed last month from Founder & President at AWare Technologies to Senior Prototype Engineer at Apple. This is a significant hire for Apple and one that shows the company is looking far ahead into the future of mobile computing, writes Seth Weintraub. DeVaul has a background in wearable technologies as you can see from his personal homepage, as well as a PhD. in Media Arts & Sciences from MIT. At MIT, he worked on new human-computer interaction techniques for wearable, mobile, and portable applications. His dissertation was on 'The Memory Glasses,' a heads-up display focused on the problems associated with wearable memory support technology. This included hardware and software architectures, and low-attention human-computer interaction for wearable computing, including the use of subliminal visual cues for just-in-time memory support.
Games

Submission + - Bioshock 2's First DLC Already on Disc

An anonymous reader writes: "Trouble is brewing in Rapture. The recently released Sinclair Solutions multiplayer pack for BioShock 2 is facing upset players over the revelation that the content is already on the disc, and the $5 premium is an unlock code. It started when users on the 2K Forums noticed that the content is incredibly small: 24KB on the PC, 103KB on the PlayStation 3, and 108KB on the Xbox 360. 2K Games responded with a post explaining that the decision was made in order to keep the player base in tact, without splitting it between the haves and have-nots."

Original Source
Censorship

Submission + - Scientology Attempts to Censor German Documentary (guardian.co.uk)

eldavojohn writes: Slashdot posts on operating thetans aren't the only things Scientologists are trying to censor. The Guardian is reporting on the strained relationship that Scientology is having with the German government and the airing of a pesky documentary on Southwest Broadcasting. "Until Nothing Remains," a $2.3 million documentary, is slotted to air live on German television at the end of this month. It recounts the true story of Heiner von Rönn and his family's suffering when he tried to leave the Church of Scientology. A Scientology Spokesperson called the film false and intolerant and also said they are investigating legal means to stop the film from being aired. Despite an unusually high degree of caution and secrecy about the filming, anyone involved with the film suffered from the usual harassment from Scientologists when investigations of wrong doing in Scientology are undertaken. More details on the film can be gleaned here. Commencing Streisand Effect in 3 ... 2 ... 1 ...

Submission + - Prom Cancelled To Prevent Lesbian Date (yahoo.com) 1

TrekkieTechie writes: A Mississippi school district has decided that it would be better to cancel the local high school's prom outright rather than allowing a lesbian student, Constance McMillen, to take a female date. After the ACLU stated that preventing her attendance violated her rights, the district announced the dance was cancelled. Many students on campus blame McMillen for the cancellation — 'Thanks for ruining my senior year', said one — but shouldn't fingers be pointed at the school officials behind the decision instead?
Cellphones

Submission + - Android growth? Lies, damn lies and statistics (networkworld.com)

Julie188 writes: comScore just released its latest US Mobile Subscriber Market Share report and it does indeed show that Android had a phenomenal quarter. It more than doubled it's share of smart phone users. The media is heralding Android as the death of Windows Mobile (which may eventually be true enough) and, if not a cause of death, then at least a serious illness for the iPhone. But the truth is, not all phones are smart. In fact the overwhelming majority are not. While smartphone usage did increase by a healthy 18% from the prior reporting period, there are 42.7 million smartphone users in the US. There are 234 million mobile subscribers.

Submission + - The FCC Wants You to Test Your Broadband Speeds (wired.com) 1

AnotherUsername writes: The FCC is asking the nation's broadband and smartphone users to use its broadband testing tools to help the feds and consumers know what speeds are actually available, not just promised by the nation's telecoms.

By going to http://www.broadband.gov/, users enter their address and test their broadband download speed, upload speed, latency, and jitter using one of two tests(users can choose to test with the other after one test is complete). The FCC is requiring the street address, as it may use this data to analyze broadband quality and availability on a geographic basis.

The FCC isn’t forgetting about those left out of the broadband revolution and is asking those who live in a broadband “Dead Zone” by filling out a report online, calling the FCC at -888-CALL-FCC, faxing the e-mail or even sending a letter through the Postal Service.

The announcement comes just six days before the FCC presents the first ever national broadband plan to Congress. Goals include 100 million Americans with 100 Mbps service by 2010, bringing affordable broadband to rural and urban areas, and helping digital laggards get online.

The FCC is collecting IP addresses, along with physical addresses, but is not asking for names or e-mail addresses. They promise not to release the street addresses, with some exceptions noted in the privacy policy. A free Java plug-in is necessary to run the test.

Submission + - Mass Produced Mini-Nukes? (publicradio.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Marketplace aired an interesting article about the possibility of decentralized "mini nukes" being used to provide power for towns or small cities. Based on designs for nuclear submarines, these reactors could prove to be a more economical solution for allowing nuclear power to become for widespread. By using a modular, mass-produced design costs for nuclear power could fall dramatically. The main corporate website for the reactors can be found here: http://www.babcock.com/products/modular_nuclear/ .
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft Gives Rival Browsers a Lift (nytimes.com)

gollum123 writes: Rivals of Microsoft’s market-leading Web browser have attracted a flurry of interest since the company, fulfilling a regulatory requirement, started making it easier for European users of its Windows operating system to switch. Mozilla, whose Firefox browser is the strongest competitor to Microsoft’s Internet Explorer worldwide, said that more than 50,000 people had downloaded Firefox via a “choice screen” that has been popping up on Windows-equipped computers in Europe since the end of last month. Opera Software, based in Oslo, said downloads of its browser in Belgium, France, Britain, Poland and Spain had tripled since the screen began to appear. Microsoft said it was too early to tell whether the choice screen might prompt significant numbers of users to change. The digital ballot is being delivered over the Internet with software updates, and it is expected to take until mid-May to complete the process. The browser choice will also be presented to buyers of new Windows computers across the European Union for five years.

Submission + - Boeing 'Phantom Eye' Hydrogen Powered Vehicle. (planenews.com)

gilgsn writes: The Boeing Company has begun to build Phantom Eye, its first unmanned, liquid-hydrogen powered, high altitude long endurance (HALE) demonstrator aircraft. “The essence of Phantom Eye is its propulsion system,” said Darryl Davis, Boeing Phantom Works president. “After five years of technology development, we are now deploying rapid prototyping to bring together an unmanned aerial vehicle [UAV] with a breakthrough liquid-hydrogen propulsion system that will be ready to fly early next year.”
Google

Submission + - Google launches tool for searching public data (cnet.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Google Public Data Explorer takes information from public databases and makes 2-D charts, graphs, and maps. Data sources include the World Bank, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. Census Bureau, the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, the California Department of Education, Eurostat, the U.S. Center for Disease Control, and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. The most frequently viewed graphs are those on unemployment and school comparisons.

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