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The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Does The 'Hacker Ethic' Harm Today's Developers? (infoworld.com)

snydeq writes: "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister questions whether the 'hacker ethic' synonymous with computer programing in American society is enough for developers to succeed in today's economy. To be sure, self-taught 'cowboy coders' — the hallmark of today's programming generation in America — are technically proficient, McAllister writes, 'but their code is less likely to be maintainable in the long term, and they're less likely to conform to organizational development processes and coding standards.' And though HTC's Vineet Nayar's proclamation that American programmers are 'unemployable' is overblown, there may be wisdom in offering a new kind of computer engineering degree targeted toward the student who is more interested in succeeding in industry than exploring computing theory. 'American software development managers often complain that Indian programmers are too literal-minded,' McAllister writes, but perhaps Americans have swung the pendulum too far in the other direction. In other words, are we 'too in love with the hacker ideal of the 1980s to produce programmers who are truly prepared for today's real-life business environment?'"
Music

Submission + - What if Napster Worked with the Music Industry (arstechnica.com)

furby076 writes: "Ars Technica has an interesting article about a what-if scenario. Something akin to an alternate universe straight from a comic book, the head of the UK musc trade group, BPI, discusses the mistakes the major labels made by not teaming up with Napster. According to the article this mind-set is not new and other RIAA executives are thinking about the subject and what could have happened if they embraced peer-to-peer a decade ago."
The Courts

Submission + - Supreme Court won't hear case on DVR storage (yahoo.com)

drunken_boxer777 writes: The Supreme Court will not hear arguments as to whether Cablevision Systems Corp's remote-storage DVR violates copyright laws.

Hollywood studios and television networks lost their bid Monday for the Supreme Court to block the use of a new digital video recorder system that could make it cheaper and easier for viewers to record shows and watch them when they want, without commercials.

Here's to everything on-demand!

Programming

Submission + - AJAX vs. Desktop App

An anonymous reader writes: Our company is starting development on a small database-backed application and we're debating the use of AJAX-based forms/reports versus something more traditional like Python or Java. Our intended clientele is small to medium sized businesses. Is it more difficult to get prospective customers to buy into an AJAX-based platform versus a desktop application?
Social Networks

Of Catty Rants and Copyrights 339

Frequent Slashdot contributor Bennett Haselton writes "A newspaper copies a rant from a girl's MySpace page and reprints it as a 'Letter to the Editor' without her permission. Could the girl sue for copyright violation? This question provoked much more disagreement among legal experts than I expected." Read on for the details.
Microsoft

Submission + - Windows 7 Upgrade: Why Pay Twice For the Same OS? (pcworld.com)

Ransak writes: "It would appear that despite the recession Microsoft is looking to get paid twice for Windows 7 from some business customers. FTA — "In another blow to customers, Microsoft says free Windows 7 upgrades--for companies that purchase new hardware between now and the Oct. 22 release date of the new OS--will be limited to 25 machines." As pointed out in the article, Gartner has weighed in on this."
Portables

Submission + - Nokia's netbooks - keep your hair on (tamoggemon.com)

Anonymous Coward writes: "Nokia's recently-announced partnership with Intel has caused concern for quite a few key players in the industry: is Nokia planning to give up on S60, Maemo or anything else? Is this a game-changing move? Or is it just a matter of maximising marketshare and revenue? Read on for the full scoop! 13102008285 Nokias netbooks keep your hair on In order to understand what is going on here, we IMHO need to take a step back and look at how the majority of netbooks is being sold nowadays. The little critter pictured above (yours truly's MSI Wind U100) was purchased directly from the manufacturer: which is a way very few people go. It is furthermore used as a subnotebook (and is also referred to as such)...and generally does a formidable job."
Security

Submission + - Sony Begins Shipping PCs With Green Dam In China (informationweek.com)

Dotnaught writes: "Sony is now shipping computers in China with Green Dam installed, in advance of the Chinese government's July 1 deadline. But the company is disclaiming responsibility for any damage caused by the Web filtering software. Documents posted by Hong Kong-based media studies professor Rebecca MacKinnon also suggest that the Chinese government is considering similar filtering requirements for mobile phones."
KDE

Submission + - Aaron Seigo Puts Out Call to Save Freedesktop.org (blogspot.com)

MaryBethP writes: "Aaron Seigo writes on his blog http://aseigo.blogspot.com/ a call-to-arms for freedesktop.org. "What is freedesktop.org supposed to be? Well, it's supposed to be a place for people working on F/OSS desktop projects to come together and collaborate on shared designs and shared software. It's been successful in bringing together drag and drop, window manager hints, application menus, icon themes, bookmarks, D-Bus and much more. This is valuable work and freedesktop.org is, or at least should, be vital to the F/OSS desktop platform.

It has seen better days, however. Currently it suffers from two major illnesses: administritus and anarchiosis."

Full blog here:

http://aseigo.blogspot.com/2009/06/saving-freedesktoporg-together.html"

The Internet

Submission + - Sniffing browser history for art

holdenkarau writes: "You may remember previous slashdot discussions on browser history sniffing, but there is a new kid in town doing something a bit different. web2.0collage.com uses similar browser history sniffing to determine what websites you visit and creates a collage of them. Before you get worried, it uses a list of "web2.0" sites, so the collage will (probably) be appropriate (unless you don't want your colleagues knowing about your slashdot habbits). An interesting application of potentially scary technology. For those wanting to skip the warning screen and go straight to the browser sniffing this should do the trick."
Security

Submission + - G20 protesters hit gov't with email attacks (zdnet.co.uk)

Jack Spine writes: G20 protesters sent targeted emails to the UK government in an attempt to hack into parliamentary systems, according to government email security provider MessageLabs. This was one of the events which bolstered government thinking about the need for an office dedicated to cyber attack and defence, according to MessageLabs' head Adrian Chamberlain.
Cellphones

Submission + - Standard Cellphone Chargers for Europeans (reuters.com)

k33l0r writes: "The European Commission is confident that all major cellphone companies have reached an agreement on a standard cellphone charger for consumers within the EU.

"People will not have to throw away their charger whenever they buy a new phone," said EU Industry Commissioner Guenter Verheugen.

Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Motorola, Apple, LG, NEC, Qualcomm, Research in Motion, Samsung and Texas Instruments have all signed the agreement."

The Internet

Submission + - Ad Networks the Laggards in Jackson Traffic Spike (datacenterknowledge.com)

miller60 writes: "Advertising networks are being cited as the major bottlenecks in performance woes experienced by major news sites during the crush of Internet traffic Thursday as news broke about the death of pop star Michael Jackson. An analysis by Keynote found that many news sites delivered their own content promptly, only to find their page delivery delayed by slow-loading ads. The inclusion of third-party content on high-traffic pages is a growing challenge for site operators. It's not just ads, as social media widgets are also seeing wider usage on commercial sites. How best to balance the content vs. performance tradeoffs?"
Earth

Submission + - Shuttle Launch Clouds Put Tunguska Event as Comet (space.com)

eldavojohn writes: "Space.com brings word of a team using new evidence is suggesting that the mysterious 1908 event in Tunguska was a comet despite a team two years ago arguing it was an asteroid. The comet theory does explain the odd phenomenon of the night skies being lit up for several nights following the event all across Europe--about 3,000 miles away. Researchers believe this points to a comet because when the space shuttles launched today pass through the atmosphere they cause or improve the formation of noctilucent clouds. These clouds are so high up (55 miles) they are only made of ice particles and they are only visible at night which gives researchers reason to draw the conclusion that the 300 metric tons of water vapor that the shuttle pumps into the Earth's thermosphere must likely indicate that the thing that hit was loaded with water or ice. This would make it a comet and not an asteroid. This--of course--raises new upper-atmosphere physics problems for the Tunguska event but explains the strange phenomenon over the skies of the world following it. You may remember analysis of Lake Cheko last year in an effort to better understand what happened."
Microsoft

Submission + - Woman Linked to SC Gov. Sanford Had Hotmail Hacked

theodp writes: "The Argentine woman linked to Gov. Mark Sanford of South Carolina said Sunday that she had a "firm suspicion" of who broke into her Hotmail account that discussed her relationship with the governor, but she declined to name the person. In a statement read on Argentine television, Maria Belen Chapur revealed her Hotmail account was hacked around November 24th and recovered on December 8th, "after answering a long questionnaire sent by Microsoft.""

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