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Comment Useless anyway (Score 1) 857

My Nokia 800 tablet was stolen. I had it configured so that every time it detects a network it downloads my mail
from a server I control. The thieves did not notice, so I accumulated a lot of logs that I passed to the police.
Did they catch the thieves? No way! They had the logs for 3 months now, but their "computer expert" is still trying to figure out what to do with the IP addresses. It is not that difficult, though, as one address shows up a lot and is clearly a cable connection, so that must be the thieves home. So logs are totally useless to the police, at least in small towns.

GNU is Not Unix

Author of ATSC Capture and Edit Tool Tries to Revoke GPL 472

The author of ATSC capture and edit tool has announced that he is attempting to revoke the licensing of his product under the GPL General Public License. Unfortunately it appears that the GPL does not allow this particular action. Of course in this heyday of lawyers and trigger happy litigators who can tell. What successes have others had in trying to take something they once operated under the GPL and make it private? And the more pressing question, why?
United States

Submission + - FBI wants you to help solve 36-year old mystery (networkworld.com)

coondoggie writes: "In what is likely the last push to solve one the most notorious crimes of this century, the FBI this week opened previously sealed files and unseen photos on the now 36 year old Dan (DB) Cooper hijacking case. In November 1971, between Seattle and Reno, Cooper parachuted out of the back of an airliner he'd hijacked with a bag filled with $200,000 in stolen cash. He's never been found, though some of the stolen money was recovered. This week the FBI Special Agent Larry Carr put out new information and a release looking for further public help in solving the 36-year old mystery. "This case is 36 years old, it's beyond its expiration date, but I asked for the case because I was intrigued with it," Carr told the New York Times. Carr, a federal agent based in Seattle who usually investigates bank robberies, and who was 4 when the hijacking occurred. "I remember as a child reading about it and wondering what had happened. It's surreal that after 36 years here I am, the only investigator left. I wanted to take a shot at solving it." http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/23435"
Education

Submission + - MIT Dean of Admissions Resigns in Lying Scandal

Billosaur writes: "CNN has a report that the Dean of Admissions at MIT has resigned her post after admitting to lying about her academic record. "Marilee Jones, who joined the staff of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1979 to lead the recruitment of women at the university, stepped down from her post after admitting that she had 'misrepresented her academic degrees to the institute,' according to a statement posted on MIT's Web site." The school had recently received information about her credentials and the subsequent investigation uncovered the misrepresentations. Question is, why did it take 28 years?"

Feed Up next on the FCC spectrum auction block: 700MHz band (engadget.com)

Filed under: Cellphones

We know, jostling over the almighty 700MHz band may not be as exciting as tossing in your bid for the one and only PowerFest '94 cartridge, but for wireless providers and startups alike, this one is big. The FCC has finally announced technical specifications for the upcoming 700MHz band auction, which is being dubbed the "most valuable available slice of radio-frequency spectrum," but are holding out on the anxious bidders by "not deciding exactly how the spectrum will be divided and sold off." The Congressional Budget Office has reckoned that "as much as $15 billion" could be added to the federal treasury as a result of the auction, as the swath of airwaves in the 700MHz range is being "vacated by television broadcasters as they make the transition to digital TV," which makes for "prime territory for providing advanced wireless broadband services." The FCC Chairman was quoted as saying that this auction would hopefully enable a "third pipe to the home" to be constructed in order to provide "affordable broadband to all Americans." If all this sounds interesting, and you've got billions laying around collecting dust, it sounds like you're in for quite the battle come auction time.

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!


Censorship

Submission + - Student Arrested For Violent Essay

doug141 writes: An Illinois student was arrested for writing a violent essay. He was charged with disorderly conduct for submitting an essay to a creative writing class featuring himself committing mass murder and necrophilia. Is this a positive step towards court-mandated counseling for a man on the edge, a chilling restriction of speech, or both?
Math

Submission + - What Language for Numerical Computing Do You Use?

chip_whisperer writes: "Hi. I'm a college student who'll be doing a research internship this summer for a major university out west. My adviser says that she'd like me to do some numerical computing (always exciting!) for her, but that they use Fortran. Now, I don't have any experience with the language, but it seems quite lacking in respect to other languages like Matlab or Maple. Why are so many people still using Fortran? What language/program would you recommend for numerical computing projects in the scientific community? And if you do use Fortran, why have you stayed with it?"

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