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Books

Submission + - Hire Randall Munroe For a Custom xkcd Strip (breadpig.com)

Alexis Ohanian writes: "Xkcd is releasing its book next week. As part of the September fundraisers to build an xkcd school through Room to Read, Randall Munroe will auction off commissioned comic strips in at parties in New York City and Silicon Valley in September. (Tickets through the party are being sold through a dutch-style auction a la Google IPO, so you state your price). Also to be auctioned off: lunch with Randall."
Patents

Submission + - IBM Claim patents promote open source (theregister.co.uk)

squizzar writes: "I'm a bit confused by the reasoning in the Register Article here, apparently open source is "entirely based on relaxed or non-existent copyright restrictions", which is news to me. I thought that the whole mechanism by which open source code was protected and kept open was to use the strength of copyright laws.

I don't think they are being helped by IBM making statements such as: "without patent protection, the incentives to innovate in the field of software are significantly reduced. Patent protection has promoted the free sharing of source code on a patentee's terms — which has fueled the explosive growth of open source software development." As far as I understand it most open source software licenses specifically prohibit their use with code that has patented elements. Surely their argument better applies to an IP vendor, who is able to sell their code without losing control over it. Either way it seems both IBM and The Register are muddying the waters a bit here..."

Submission + - An Early Look At Ragnar Tornquist's The Secret Wor (eurogamer.net)

An anonymous reader writes: At the recent Penny Arcade Expo, Funcom revealed a ton of new information on The Secret World, an MMO being designed by Ragnar Tornquist that's aiming to buck several of the genre's common trends. Tornquist also spoke later about several of the game's features and some of the design philosophy that they're working with. The game does not have a traditional class or leveling system. Instead, players gather the powers they want to use and align themselves with various factions of their choosing. "We want you to feel part of a world where the conspiracies are so dense and the politics is so thick that, when you join the secret society as a novice at the very beginning, it's this vast organization, and you'll have no idea how it works initially." PvP will be largely segregated from PvE, and new players will be able to contribute in fights that involve more experienced players. Funcom released some concept art and in-game screenshots for The Secret World to go along with a new cinematic trailer.

Submission + - Motorola unveils Open Source Android phone and Soc (ostatic.com)

ruphus13 writes: "Motorola announced their Android handsets today, along with a 'socially aware' application layer called MotoBlur. The Motorola Cliq is expected in a few weeks. From the post, "Dr. Sanjay K. Jha, Co-CEO of Motorola and CEO of the company's Mobile Devices division, unveiled Motorola's Android platform play. Motorola is going to be placing large bets on the open source operating system over the coming years, but is coming out of the gate with just two Android phones...It will arrive before the holidays. Key to both of the phones, and key to Motorola's overall Android strategy is a new interface and application layer called MotoBlur. It's focused on "a single stream" for social networking features, software updates, messages, syncing, e-mails, videos, photos, and more...The Cliq phone has a 5-megapixel camera, slide-out keyboard, 24 frame-per-second video capabilities, GPS, a headphone jack, an advanced browser from Google, integrated Exchange service, and Google roaming services including Google voice search, access to maps, Google calendar, and more. It also provides one-click access to Android Market and the thousands of Android applications there."
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft limits Zune HD to the U.S.

Mark writes: Microsoft says it currently has no plans to bring the Zune HD outside of the US, Ars Technica says. 'For the time being the Zune HD device will remain US only,' a Microsoft spokesperson told Ars. That's the official word, despite reports from April 2009 indicating that this year's Zune platfrom update would be an international one. It looks as if Microsoft wants to start completely from scratch with the Zune HD; Redmond used the US as a testing ground for the Zune, and it looks as if it wants to do the same with the Zune HD. Microsoft is again entering a saturated market, just this time it's doing it with a device available in two sizes, instead of one. The Zune didn't get very far in terms of the number of markets, nor in the number of sales.
The Internet

Submission + - 3 Days Left in Canadian Copyright Consultation

An anonymous reader writes: With only three days left in the Canadian copyright consultation, it looks like users are getting hit by demands for new levies, lawsuits, and locks. The music and movie groups are calling for a DMCA+ model that includes three-strikes and you're out, while copyright collectives want new taxes on iPods. Now Bell Canada has told a Canadian government copyright consultation that the recording industry should be suing its subscribers. Time for Canadians to have their say before it's too late.
Space

Submission + - NASA Scientists Levitate Mice (yahoo.com) 1

sterlingda writes: "Scientists working on behalf of NASA built a device to simulate variable levels of gravity. It consists of a superconducting magnet that generates a field powerful enough to levitate the water inside living animals. Experiments are being run to test how they respond to microgravity, both physically and psychologically."
Hardware Hacking

Engineering Students Build Robotic Foosball Players 59

Andre writes "As their final-year project, an eight-man team of fourth-year electrical and computer-engineering students at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, constructed a robot-controlled, motor-and-actuator foosball table capable of playing against human opponents in a two-on-two fashion; one mechanical player controls two defensive rods (goalies and full-backs) and the other controls two offensive rods (half-backs and forwards). They considered the computers 'medium-skilled' players in that they were very competitive against beginners and fairly competitive against intermediates."
Government

Quebec Says 'Non' To English-Only Video Games 554

daveofdoom writes "The French-Canadian government of Quebec is saying 'non' to English-only video games if French versions are available. 'It's causing a lot of consternation among retailers and gamers alike, who fear the rules will lead to delays in video games arriving in the province, and may not accomplish what the law intends, which is to promote and protect the French language.' This is a ridiculous rule, as game companies can simply stop creating French versions of games to bypass the restriction."
Power

MIT Building Batteries Using Viruses 98

thefickler writes "Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are now using viruses to build cathodes for Lithium-Ion batteries. Three years ago these same researchers found they could build an anode using viruses. Creating both the anode and cathode using viruses will make batteries easy to build. This nanoscale battery technology will allow batteries to be lightweight and to 'take the shape of their container' rather than creating containers for the batteries, which could open up new possibilities for car and electronics manufacturers."
Games

FileFront Reopens Its Doors 25

boarder8925 writes "FileFront, who announced on March 24th that they would be shutting down, has been given new life. The original owners of the website bought it back from Ziff Davis Media, who shut down FileFront because it had become financially unviable. 'We're happy to announce to the gaming community that as of today, April 1st, 2009, FileFront is a completely independent company again and is no longer part of Ziff Davis Media. All previously suspended services should be active and working again. We thank Ziff Davis Media for their cooperation and willingness to keep the site and community alive.' They repeatedly state that this is not an April Fool's Day joke, and indeed the site appears to be up and running as usual."
Music

Alpine Legend Revolutionizes Music Game Genre 45

Microsoft has announced the upcoming release of Alpine Legend for the Xbox 360. Building upon the established titles of the music game genre, Alpine Legend takes you to the Swiss mountaintops, where you and your friends play up to three Alpenhorns at a time while a fourth yodels along. When you're done playing, you can disassemble the 8-foot horns for easy storage. "Jam with alpine legends like Franz 'The Manz' Lang and Johann Hornbostel. Shake the mountain tops with 100 classic Alphorn tracks including, 'Whose spit is in my horn?' and 'More goat bell (It needs).'"
Worms

Conficker Worm Strike Reports Start Rolling In 508

Nieriko writes "Reports are trickling in about the impact from the Conficker worm, as infected systems passed zero hour at midnight and began downloading additional malicious components. Here are a couple of the more notable incidents caused by Conficker so far, according to published reports: — '... shortly after midnight local time, an ATM in the capital city of Reykjavik began spewing 100-Krona notes. ... A nuclear missile installation near Elmendorf Air force Base outside of Anchorage, Alaska briefly went on a full-scale military alert after technicians manning the bunker suspected that several of their control systems were infected with Conficker.'"

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