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Portables

Submission + - Are laptop batteries the next "printer ink"

Quixote writes: Sometime back I bought a Dell Inspiron laptop because Dell was offering a very good deal on it. A few weeks after the warranty expired, the battery suddenly died. It was as if the battery was non-existent: the laptop would shutdown if unplugged even if the battery had been in the laptop the whole time. When plugged in, the battery charging light would keep flashing. This seemed quite puzzling, since just days before this, the battery used to give me a good 2 hours or so of use.

Searching around on the web to see if the flashing lights meant anything, I came across this page. It seems like lots of people have been reporting the same symptoms: just after the warranty expires, the battery mysteriously "dies". Even the Dell forums are replete with posts from unhappy users.

The solution from Dell is: buy a new battery. But they aren't cheap: a Dell one runs you about $100.

I know I should have known better than buying a Dell (cue the "Dude!" jokes). But this begs a bigger question: is this legal (it certainly doesn't seem ethical)? How many of these (working) batteries end up in the landfill? Have laptop batteries become the next "printer ink", forcing us to keep buying new ones?
Security

Submission + - Phrack has reborn : #64 is out

The Circle of Lost Hackers writes: "The hacking electronic magazine Phrack is back online. A new issue has been released this week-end, which ends up more than a year and a half without publication. This issue features a mix of scene articles and many highly technical papers dealing with almost all topics of computer hacking: Hardware, Code analysis & Reverse engineering, previously unpublished Kernel & Heap exploits techniques, applied network intrusion on Windows and UNIX, Cryptanalysis, OsX kernel tricks, are waiting for you. A new volume of a very high quality that reminds some old-school issues as it also includes its amount of Underground and body/mind experiences reports. A must read."
Networking

Submission + - A Linux Computer in Every Garage?

An anonymous reader writes: A U.S. government- and industry-led coalition aiming to equip every car and roadside in America with wirelessly connected computers has tapped Linux for the design of a system that aims to lower driver death rates, reduce traffic jams, and media-enable cars. The project, which is under the auspices of the Vehicle Infrastructure Integration Consortium (VII-C) and funded by the Department of Transportation (DOT), ten state departments of transportation, and seven vehicle manufacturers, has adopted an Linux and open source strategy, at least at the prototype level.
Puzzle Games (Games)

Submission + - Checkers has been Solved

r55man writes: "The Chinook project recently announced that checkers has been solved. Perfect play from both sides results in a draw. From their website:

On May 8, 2007, we were pleased to announce that checkers is now solved. From the standard starting position, Black (who moves first) is guaranteed a draw with perfect play. White (moving second) is also guaranteed a draw, regardless of what Black plays as the opening move. Checkers is the largest game that has been solved to date.
"
Security

Submission + - Phone-based Two-Factor Coolness

dispensa writes: "Today at Interop Las Vegas, Positive Networks debuted its new two-factor authentication service, called PhoneFactor. Unlike other two-factor technologies, this one works by placing a confirmation call to your phone during login, so it works with any phone and with no software to install.

PhoneFactor will be made available for free to anyone. Enterprise-level upgrades will also be available.

More here:
    http://weblog.infoworld.com/smbit/archives/2007/05 /interop_twofact.html
    http://kernelmustard.com/2007/05/21/phonefactor-fr ee-two-factor-authentication-for-everyone/

(Disclaimer: I'm an architect and coder on this project, and Positive's CTO.)"
Security

Submission + - First OpenOffice virus emerges

Slinkysausage writes: "Pop the champagne corks, Microsoft. Yes, it's another round of FUD from an anti-malware vendor that has gotten hold of a proof-of-concept virus that has never been spotted in the wild. STILL, it is kinda interesting: the worm exploits a vulnerability in the "StarBasic" scripting language included in OpenOffice to drop scripts in platform-appropriate languages onto the host computer. For example, on Windows it drops Javascript files as well as using MiRC to propagate, on OS X, Rubyscript, and on Linux, Python and Pearl. APC Magazine has the lowdown including part of the indecent picture the virus shows ... of a man in a bunny suit doing a gal in the woods."
Music

Submission + - RIAA Seeks Royalties From Terrestrial Radio

SierraPete writes: "First it was Napster, then it was Internet radio, then it was college students and dead/dying people. But now our friends at the RIAA are going decidedly low-tech. The Los Angeles Times reports that the RIAA wants royalties from radio stations. Congress long ago exempted radio stations from paying royalties to performers and labels because radio helped sell music. But since the labels that make up the RIAA are not getting the cash they desire through sales of CD's and since Internet and Satellite broadcasters are forced to cough up cash to their racket, now the RIAA wants terrestrial radio to pay up as well. That sound you're hearing is the goose that laid the golden egg taking one for the team..."
Television

Submission + - ABC breaks on-line video viewing for Linux users

Anonymous Coward writes: "It used to be that with Firefox 2.0 with the flashplayer 9 plug-in you could view the videos on www.abc.com. A while ago they announced that their "new" player would only work on Windows XP and Mac however they did leave a link to the old player which worked just fine with Linux. Today, the old player is no longer an option."
The Media

Submission + - "Software Update" shuts down XM Radio Sate

George writes: New York (NY) — XM Radio is experiencing massive outages after one of its satellites was disabled. The company says satellite number 1 is down for "performance" reasons and the company is currently performing a "software update". While the company has a spare satellite, many customers in the United States and Canada are still experiencing problems. TG Daily Reported, http://www.tgdaily.com/content/view/32127/97/.

I live in North Carolina and my XM has been out all day long. Anyone else?
Red Hat Software

Submission + - Open Voting Consortium visits Red Hat Summit '07

nadamsieee writes: Julie Bryce of Red Hat Magazine got the chance to chat a bit with Alan Dechert during the 2007 Red Hat Summit. She asked him some questions; he gave her some answers. Alan stated that "[voting software] is an area ripe for open source software development." Also, when asked how corrupt the current system of voting is, Alan replied "The short answer is that I think the system is quite corrupt, and problems with the voting system are generally underreported in the media."
IBM

Submission + - IBM unveils 4.7GHz Power6 processor

jbhannah writes: "Channel Insider reports that IBM has released details about their upcoming Power6 processor. It will have a clock speed of 4.7GHz, an 8MB L2 cache, and 300GB per second of internal bandwidth. According to IBM, that's enough power to handle downloading the entire contents of Apple's iTunes music store — roughly 20TB of data — in just over 60 seconds. The Power6 is manufactured using IBM's 65nm processor technologies, allowing a 30% reduction in the processor's power consumption, meaning that it can produce twice the processing power for the same level of energy consumption as the current Power5 processor. The Power6 will also have a number of other features, and its availability will coincide with that of a beta release of version 6.1 of IBM's AIX UNIX operating system."

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