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Space

15-Year-Old Student Discovers New Pulsar 103

For the second time in as many years, a student has made a discovery while participating in the Pulsar Search Collaboratory (PSC), a joint program between the National Radio Astronomy Observatory and West Virginia University designed to get students and teachers involved in analyzing data from the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT). This time it was high school sophomore Shay Bloxton, who discovered a brand new pulsar. "For Bloxton, the pulsar discovery may be only her first in a scientific career. 'Participating in the PSC has definitely encouraged me to pursue my dream of being an astrophysicist,' she said, adding that she hopes to attend West Virginia University to study astrophysics. Late last year, another West Virginia student, from South Harrison High School, Lucas Bolyard, discovered a pulsar-like object called a rotating radio transient. His discovery also came through participation in the PSC."
OS X

Apple Patches Massive Holes In OS X 246

Trailrunner7 writes with this snippet from ThreatPost: "Apple's first Mac OS X security update for 2010 is out, providing cover for at least 12 serious vulnerabilities. The update, rated critical, plugs security holes that could lead to code execution vulnerabilities if a Mac user is tricked into opening audio files or surfing to a rigged Web site." Hit the link for a list of the highlights among these fixes.

Comment Re:Global Warming Philosophy (Score 1) 1747

I have been to Antarctica and I have seen the effects of global warming. The glacier in the bay where Shakeleton left his men is a good 100 yard further from the sea than it was in his time. We made it far enough south in a non-icebreaker to see Emperor penguins. That shouldn't be happening. Believe me it's real.

Comment Re:Wall Street Journal (Score 1) 304

In a competitive market, the price will be determined by the cost. Each firm must charge enough to cover not just the marginal cost but also the capital investment to offer the product. The fees that the phone companies paid for spectrum are part of their costs and must be covered in their pricing.

Now, you could argue that this is not a competitive market and the phone companies are charging monopolistic prices. Then the price is set to maximize profit and may well be more than is required to cover costs.

My guess is that the price of the spectrum is pushing up the prices we are paying.

Image

Verizon Sued After Tech Punches Customer In Face 493

suraj.sun writes "A Verizon customer filed a lawsuit after the tech the company sent out got a little punchy. Instead of fixing the customer's problem, the tech allegedly hit him in the face. The New York Post says the tech attacked the customer after he asked to see some ID before allowing access to the apartment. From the article, '"You want to know my name? Here's my name," Benjamin snarled, slapping his ID card into Isakson's face, according to Isakson's account of the December 2008 confrontation. "The guy essentially snapped. He cold-cocked me, hit me two or three solid shots to the head while my hands were down," said Isakson, a limo driver. He said the pounding bloodied his face and broke his glasses. But things got uglier, Isakson said, when Benjamin squeezed him around the neck and pressed him up against the wall. "He's prepared to kill me," Isakson said. "That's all I could think of." The customer broke free and ran away. The Verizon tech then chased the customer until he was subdued by a neighbor who was an off-duty cop.'"
Biotech

Gene Therapy Causes Blind Woman To Grow New Fovea 86

Al writes "A woman with a rare, inherited form of blindness is now able to read, thanks to a gene therapy that caused a new fovea — the part of the retina that is most densely populated with photoreceptors — to grow in her eye. The patient suffers from Leber congenital amaurosis, meaning an abnormal protein makes her photoreceptors have a severely impaired sensitivity to light. She received the experimental treatment twelve months ago when physicians injected a gene encoding a functional copy of the protein into a small part of one eye — about eight-to-nine millimeters in diameter. Along with two other patients receiving the same treatment, her eyesight improved after just a few weeks. Now the physicians report that this patient seems to have developed a new fovea, exactly where she received the injection. Because the woman has been effectively blind since birth, the results suggest that the brain is able to adapt to new visual stimuli remarkably quickly."

Comment Refusing to sell to non-warranty holder (Score 1) 665

Nope, I've had the same problem with Dell. I spent the better part of two hours on the phone with various Dell employees on various continents before I found somebody who would sell me the disk caddy for my Dell Workstation. (I am not the original owner.) Even these days their phone bill must have been more than the cost of the plastic part.

Comment Re:Checked it? (Score 2, Informative) 544

I do. I don't want it on the plane and it weighs enough to be a nuisance. I pack it in the middle of the suitcase, protected by clothes and, so far, haven't had any trouble. Any data that I'd worry about is encrypted and the laptop is an old, slow, one that I use just for travel. Someday, I suppose it will be stolen or broken. Until then, I'm more than happy not to be lugging it around and putting it in a separate tray for security.

Media (Apple)

Submission + - Apple Hangs Tough On iPhone Bricking

An anonymous reader writes: Two other shoes have dropped in the Apple iPhone bricking controversy. Apple iPhone spokeswoman Jennifer Bowcock has responded to InfoWeek blogger Alex Wolfe's Sunday posting, asserting that " Apple's position has not changed since we issued our statement last week." (The statement is the one is which Apple said unauthorized apps or unlocking "will likely result in the modified iPhone becoming permanently inoperable.") In addition, California lawyer Damian Fernandez has launched a Web site through which he's actively soliciting iPhone users to join a suit against Apple.
Security

Submission + - DOS attack on Estonia

wbean writes: "A massive DOS attack on Estonia's government agency Web sites has persisted for days and has essentially cut the country off from the wider Internet. The attack is believed to originate from Russia and was motivated by the removal of a Russian World War II memorial from the center of town to a military cemetary."
Space

Submission + - NASA to use Metric System on Moon Mission

JustOK writes: With the first mission scheduled for 2020, NASA plans, among other things, to use "metric units for all operations on the lunar surface"
"NASA's lunar plan also encourages participation by other nations, as well as non-governmental organizations and commercial groups." NASA has nearly 60 space and Earth science projects currently, with about half having some type of international cooperation. North and South lunar poles are being looked at as locations for moon bases. Lunar stays of up to 180 days are being planned.
The project will see "A string of robot spacecraft will shoot for the Moon within the next two years, departing from Japan, China, India, as well as the United States."
According to a report via Yahoo! by Space.com staff, NASA has had informal discussions on using Internet protocols for lunar communications.
Slashback

Submission + - Copy Protection Going Over the Edge?

Paco103 writes: I recently (today) purchased Need for Speed Carbon Collectors Edition. The game would not run after installing, claiming I need to insert the proper disc. I tried to call their tech support, but it was always busy. I tried submitting a support request online, but it would never go through. It stated the userID field must have a value (I was logged in, not much else *I* could do about it. So in response to the gaming industries lack of respect to their customers, and treating all customers as tbeives from the start, I'd like to submit an open letter to the industry. While this problem is not isolated to the gaming industry by any means, they are what hit my nerve today. At least with DRM, I *CAN* listen/watch how and when they say. With my game, I am not even able to do that tonight.

Here's just a thought. How about you give your customers the benefit of the doubt. I just bought a game today (Need for Speed Carbon by EA Games, if you're wondering). When I try to run it, I am told I need to insert the correct disc.

I resent being treated like a thief. The people that are copying this will continue to copy it. People like me, that purchased the game legit, are left wondering why we can't play the game we purchased, when James across the street was playing the copy he downloaded illegally a week before it was released.

Treat your customers like the enemy, and they may soon become it.

I don't mind copy protection that prevents me from using virtual images, as I like to do because dealing with discs can get annoying. It only affects me if I try to run the game in a non-standard way.

This just pisses me off as a loyal customer. Please feel free to provide solutions if you feel like respecting your customers. I'm not waiting around. I bought this game today, and I will play it as I have bought the right to.

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