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Submission + - Slashdot beta sucks 9

An anonymous reader writes: Maybe some of the slashdot team should start listening to its users, most of which hate the new user interface. Thanks for ruining something that wasn't broken.
Science

Submission + - Oxford Nanopore introduces DNA 'strand sequencing' on the high-throughput GridIO (nanoporetech.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Oxford Nanopore has released details of the MinION; a disposable DNA sequencing device the size of a USB memory stick whose low cost, portability and ease of use are designed to make DNA sequencing universally accessible. A single MinION is expected to retail at less than $900.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft unveils new Windows logo (arstechnica.com)

IronHalik writes: "The multicolored Windows flag is no more. Windows 8 will do away with the wavy Windows logo that Microsoft has used in one form or another for the last 20 years, and replace it with a logo that's, well, a window.

Windows 8 ushers in a new, and completely different, Windows look and feel: it brings the Metro design concept to the desktop. With Metro's emphasis on clean lines and typography, Microsoft wanted a logo that reflected these ideals, and so commissioned agency Pentagram to create the new logo."

Comment Implications outside cloud services (Score 2) 176

"Any data which is housed, stored or processed by a company, which is a U.S. based company or is wholly owned by a U.S. parent company, is vulnerable to interception and inspection by U.S. authorities. "

What doesn't fall under that? To be free of any potential US influence, EU users and companies should make sure the places they do business with have no ties to American companies? Sounds like ISPs, CDNs, web hosts, etc can be asked or forced to comply with government demands. It won't surprise me if there's a chilling of overseas demand for US Internet and Internet-connected services.

Comment Is this is bad as TFA makes it to be? (Score 1) 201

If a 5-star review initially gets people to make a shit purchase, I'm not seeing where the likelihood of a flood of negative reviews won't balance out any astroturfing or shilling. I can see it happening in a low volume item, where a few saps buy something crappy after reading a fake review, and then don't come back to warn away other shoppers, so the cycle continues. I wish they gave example items, or somehow polled customers who felt they fell prey to fake reviews.

Also, does the 85 percent statistic mean they've accepted some kind of gift or freebie, or just that they were offered them? TFA isn't clear.

Comment Re:TF2, now WOW? (Score 1) 244

TF2 is a good point. At least in TF2's case, dropping the price below anyone's impulse buy threshold grabbed a lot of players. I was surprised that $0 got so much more than $9 or $5 or whatever it fell to, not to mention the amount of times it was bundled or given away.

Robin Walker cautioned that they aren't at all sure it would work for many, or perhaps any of their other games, but it was interesting to see so many new people when they thought that everyone who wanted TF2 had it. I think they might keep a large portion of these new players, as well. The account limitations are pretty hard to bump into, and don't cripple you. It's practice and ability (or lack thereof) that limit you. Overall, people seem to have a lot of fun with it on the servers that Valve spun up recently for them.

With WoW, I'd be the first to think they advertised their customer base to death, but I guess there's always room to be surprised. Difficult to say without real numbers or statistics, which Blizzard is pretty scarce with providing, but maybe upcoming stock reports will tell. I mention that in contrast to Valve, which constantly displays its playerbase for games on its Steam stats page. Blizzard kept a lot of restrictions on their trials, and as it's mentioned several times above, it really crimps the social, or massively multiplayer, aspect of the genre.

Free to play seems to have been a good business call for TF2, and players appear to like it. WoW? Anyone's guess, but I'd wager it's just staunched the bleeding for a few weeks or months at best.

Comment Amazing new revenue source (Score 1) 342

Since US ISP's apparently are too glad to turn over name and address information when confronted with an *IAA letter, perhaps they can take it a step further: hand over the billing details.

When this cozy integration goes through, since they're already operating on guesses and the whim of 'investigators' as to your pirating, perhaps they should take the liberty of automatically debiting or tacking on to your bill the cost of the IP they think you got for free.

May as well go for the DP if you're gonna rape customers' rights (is this a rthis hard.

Comment Comment Subject (Score 1) 289

Is this really any different than trying to deliver an insurgency some form of weapons or armaments? I don't think this lets the US keep its hands any cleaner when interfering.

I'm more curious to see which is more effective - arming the equivalent of some mujahideen or rebels or even just citizens, versus getting them on Facebook. I think we've seen the blowback arming groups can result in. Could spreading rogue Internet connections be a mistake the somehow US regrets in the future? I mean other than roaming data charges.

Comment Re:Well (Score 0) 264

Dunno, man. 16GB/3G models are $200 cheaper than their Apple counterparts (429 vs 629 @ BestBuy). Do you think there's enough margin to go any lower without a Microsoft-style flooding the market at a loss?

I'll admit I'm waiting for the leapfrogging of models to slow down and to see if the tablet market will crash before jumping in myself.

Comment Are these real patents? (Score 1) 75

-A survey.
-A remote survey on a computer. Oh, oops. A "two-way interaction".

Damn. Are these real patents?

They're just...vague ideas. I'll admit I'm new to reading patents, but I guess I was under the impression you needed an actual implementation of something to get a patent. Why not just dream everything you could ever think of, and lie in wait for someone to actually do it, then pounce?

Oh. It seems that's exactly what they did, nevermind.

Comment Re:How is this going to end?!? (Score 1) 343

- Conservative/puritanical powers-that-be dying off or being squeezed out of power in the US.
- Decriminalization of drugs, and the start of a legal narcotic industry.
- Destruction (economical or literal) of the drug cartels.

Can the Mexican people really effect much change in the cartels? They can resist, but they (presumably) aren't lawless gunmen willing to do whatever it takes. I also don't think the US is going to invade any country on this continent anytime soon.

I don't know enough to say if the Mexican government is playing softball with these cartels, or whether they're just holding back the military from treating them like a formal, invading army and wiping them out. It's hard to believe an industrialized nation's military could be stopped by drug runners, unless they hamstrung themselves with strict rules of engagement. Surely they're holding back in the interest of rule of law, and not out of lack of ability?

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