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Wireless Networking

Submission + - Infrared, The New Communications Frequency?

eldavojohn writes: "Scientists at the University of Utah have figured out how to make super fast wireless internet and, with the same technology, detect biological and chemical weapons. The new idea uses far-infrared light (terahertz electromagnetic radiation). From the article, "The researchers shined far-infrared light on metal foils punctured with holes arranged in what are known as quasicrystal and quasicrystal-approximate patterns. Even though the holes make up only a portion of each foil's surface, almost all the radiation passed through the metal foils with these patterns.""
Operating Systems

Submission + - Dell Already sells pcs without M$ outside of US

Radeonic writes: "This is an interesting Topic that I've seen the most in slashdot.org, but in reality dell has in their website what they call "DOS ready computers" and the price is way lower than a normal dell. Only in desktops and in select sites. Here is an example (in spanish, dominican republic) http://lastore.dell.com/store/frameset.asp?c=do&en tity_key=DIMC521N_LACLCOMXPR&entity_type=model&l=e s&s=dhs&shopper_country=do&shopper_language=es&sho pper_segment=dhs&store_key=LATRANS"
Security

Submission + - TJX breach now worst ever: 45.7M numbers

netbuzz writes: "While the TJX data breach case first made headlines earlier this year, it took recently filed financial disclosure forms from the company to flesh out the magnitude of that crime, which experts are now calling the largest of its ilk. "Considerable damage" has been done, says a Gartner analyst, and we can presume she's speaking of both the victims and the company. ... By the way, with 45.7 million to write, TJX execs had better get busy writing those apology notes, a genre that has become so common these days that, yes, there is a "best of breed" list available.

http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/1306 7"
Communications

Submission + - Free GPS navigation for your mobile phone

Yoav writes: "amAze is the first FREE GPS navigation solution for ordinary cell-phones. It's a Java application, small and easy to download and use, that works on most of the modern java-enabled phones.
Coupled with any bluetooth GPS device, amAze offers turn-by-turn instructions (vocal and graphical) for any route in the USA and Europe. The latest released version has, for the first time ever, the ability to navigate over aerial photos and a new enhanced economic navigation mode that reduces data usage to a minimum, while retaining the accuracy of maps."
Security

Submission + - Report for Britain's Security Vs Their Privacy

eldavojohn writes: "There's a new report (pdf) out from The Royal Academy of Engineering that "identifies likely developments in information technology in the near future, considers their impact on the citizen, and makes recommendations on how to optimize their benefits to society." What's interesting about this report is that people have been lead to believe that security and privacy are related and one must be sacrificed for the other to be improved but the report claims that isn't necessarily true. A notable excerpt from the report: "Trust in the government is essential to democracy. Government use of surveillance and data collection technology, as well as the greater collection and storage of personal data by government, have the potential to decrease the level of democratic trust significantly. The extent of citizens' trust in the government to procure and manage new technologies successfully can be damaged if such projects fail." This report seems to present the possibility of maximizing what trade-offs may exist between the two but with the citizen in mind, not the government. Novel idea — maybe the British government should listen?"
Intel

Intel Next-Gen CPU Has Memory Controller and GPU 307

Many readers wrote in with news of Intel's revelations yesterday about its upcoming Penryn and Nehalem cores. Information has been trickling out about Penryn, but the big news concerns Nehalem — the "tock" to Penryn's "tick." Nehalem will be a scalable architecture with some products having on-board memory controller, "on-package" GPU, and up to 16 threads per chip. From Ars Technica's coverage: "...Intel's Pat Gelsinger also made a number of high-level disclosures about the successor to Penryn, the 45nm Nehalem core. Unlike Penryn, which is a shrink/derivative of Core 2 Duo (Merom), Nehalem is architected from the ground up for 45nm. This is a major new design, and Gelsinger revealed some truly tantalizing details about it. Nehalem has its roots in the four-issue Core 2 Duo architecture, but the direction that it will take Intel is apparent in Gelsinger's insistence that, 'we view Nehalem as the first true dynamically scalable microarchitecture.' What Gelsinger means by this is that Nehalem is not only designed to take Intel up to eight cores on a single die, but those cores are meant to be mixed and matched with varied amounts of cache and different features in order to produce processors that are tailored to specific market segments." More details, including Intel's slideware, appear at PC Perspectives and HotHardware.
Worms

Submission + - Thought RTFs were malware free? Think again!

stry_cat writes: Over at http://isc.sans.org/diary.html?storyid=2528&rss it says:

"...no doubt that you are aware of the huge number of exploits directed toward various Office applications, mainly Microsoft Word and PowerPoint. For quite some time a lot of administrators (us included) told people to convert documents to other (safer) formats, one of them being RTF (Rich Text Format). Although this format is proprietary, the specification is publicly available so a lot of word processors support this format."

However as the article continues, we find that one can still embed stuff. Embedding the right (or is it wrong) stuff can have the unsuspecting user downloading some seriously bad malware. Even worse it is likely your AV software will miss this malware!

The article concludes:

"This was another example of why complex file formats should be avoided. Even if you do scan all files on your e-mail gateway (or web filtering server), as you can see most AV programs would miss this as they would scan only the RTF document. One more time we see how important defense in depth is — in this case you would depend on user's awareness and ultimately on his desktop AV product. "
Operating Systems

Virtualizing Cuts Web App Performance 43% 223

czei writes "This just-released research report, Load Testing a Virtual Web Application, looks at the effects of virtualization on a typical ASP Web application, using VMWare on Linux to host a Windows OS and IIS web server. While virtualizing the server made it easier to manage, the number of users the virtualized Web app could handle dropped by 43%. The article also shows interesting graphs of how hyper-threading affected the performance of IIS." The report urges readers to take this research as a data point. No optimization was done on host or guest OS parameters.
Star Wars Prequels

Submission + - Star Wars stamps revealed, R2D2 mailboxes

Josh Fink writes: "In honor of the 30th anniversary of the Star Wars saga, the United Stated Postal Service has announced it will be releasing various packages of Star Wars related stamps and promotions. Among these promotions include deploying mailboxes that look like R2D2, and 41 cent stamps. You can also vote for your favorite Star Wars stamp over the USPS by visiting www.uspsjedimaster.com. I don't know about all of you, but I am rather happy to see that Jar-jar Binks is NOT an option here."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Terahertz spectrum for wireless communication

holy_calamity writes: A first step to allowing wireless data transfer over a currently unused part of the electromagnetic spectrum are reported in New Scientist. Terahertz radiation exists between radio and infrared. A new filter created at the University of Utah can filter out particular frequencies, a prerequisite for using it for data. The abstract of the paper in the journal Nature is freely available.
Operating Systems

Submission + - GPL v3 Arrives, bans patent pacts

Josh Fink writes: "Linux-watch.com has an article concerning GPL v3 which was released on March, 28. The Free Software Foundation included some new patent information regarding third parties not involved in the agreement in the third discussion draft. From the article: "We have also added new terms to stop distributors from colluding with third parties to offer selective patent protection, as Microsoft and Novell have recently done. The GPL is designed to ensure that all users receive the same rights; arrangements that circumvent this make a mockery of free software, and we must do everything in our power to stop them." You can read the full article here."

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