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Software

Submission + - MacFUSE: write to NTFS partitions from OS X

Beiden Baeren writes: "After an announcement at MacWorld, Amit Singh from Google has released the code for MacFUSE http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/. While FUSE has been available to Linux users for a while, MacFUSE means that OS X users have now support for a variety of filesystems:
  • Windows NTFS includes write support
  • FTP includes write support
  • WebDAV
  • SSHFS
  • BeagleFS
  • etc... (PicasaFS, GoogleFS)
While installing and configuring the software requires use of the command line and compiling from source, users are quickly stepping forward to provide more user-friendly installation packages such as this one by Jeff McCune of The Ohio State University's mathematics department. Personally, as a switcher to Mac from Windows, I find the ability to write to Windows NTFS invaluable, but MacFUSE provides significantly more than this. Thanks to Amit Singh and his team!"
Operating Systems

Submission + - Carmack Blasts Vista, Questions Direct X 10.

222 writes: "Apparently id's John Carmack is also having trouble finding a reason to upgrade to Vista. ""Nothing is going to help a new game by going to a new operating system. There were some clear wins going from Windows 95 to Windows XP for games, but there really aren't any for Vista," Carmack told Game Informer." He also seems to feel that Direct X 10 is more of a gimmick than anything. "They're artificially doing that by tying DX10 [DirectX 10] so close it, which is really nothing about the OS. It's a hardware-interface spec. It's an artificial thing that they're doing there." With this coming from an industry leader, will you be upgrading?"
Security

Submission + - Why blurring sensitive information is a bad idea

Rub3X writes: "For the most part this is all fine with peoples' faces as there isn't a convenient way to reverse the blur back into a photo so detailed that you can recognize the photo. So that's good if that is what you intended. However, many people also resort to blurring sensitive numbers and text. I'll illustrate why that is a BAD idea."
Biotech

Submission + - scientific basis for race: genome Hamming distance

An anonymous reader writes: Physics professor describes how genetic clustering corresponds to racial identity. Individual genetic data, when plotted in an abstract genome space, tends to cluster into groups corresponding to traditional continental ethnic groups (Europeans, Africans, Asians, etc.). Race is more than a matter of pigmentation or other superficial traits: it determines the likelihood an individual is carrying a particular gene variant.
The Internet

Submission + - Map of the Internet

Wellington Grey writes: "Author of the popular webcomic xkcd has put up a hand made map of the internet as today's comic. He also has an interesting blog entry detailing some of the work that went into it, such a pinging servers and creating a method of fractal mapping to display related regions as contiguous sections on the grid."
Role Playing (Games)

Submission + - The Environmental Cost of Your MMORPG Avatar

markmcb writes: "Taking into consideration that people in developing countries use less than 2400 kWh a day; your MMORPG avatar may be consuming more energy to exist than a real person. Given the vast array of servers that must keep avatars in the newest games like Second Life alive, an MMORPG Avatar's Eco-Footprint is large, very large. Some math from the article, 'If the average PC uses 120 watts, and a server uses 200 watts, plus 50 more for air-conditioning, then (4,000 servers x 250 watts x 24 hours) + (12,500 avatars x 120 watts x 24 hours) = 60,000,000 watt-hours or 60,000 kilowatt-hours. That gives a per-capita usage of 60,000 / 12,500 = 4.8 kWh. Over a year's time that equates to 1752 kWh per avatar.'"
Quickies

Submission + - Giant tent to be built in Astana, Kazakhstan

aitsu writes: The BBC reports :"Kazakhstan has unveiled a new architectural project for its capital Astana — a giant transparent tent that will contain an indoor city. The 150m-high (500ft) dome, designed by UK architect Norman Foster, will be built in just over a year...Underneath, in an area larger than 10 football stadiums, will be a city with squares and cobbled streets, canals, shopping centres and golf courses.The idea is to recreate summer, so that when the outside temperature is -30C, the residents of the Kazakh capital can play outdoor tennis, take boat rides or sip coffee on the pavement cafes."
Linux Business

Submission + - Malaysian Open Source Procurement Policy Reversed

Ditesh writes: "The Malaysian Open Source Masterplan, which favoured open source over proprietary public sector procurements when all other evaluations are equal, has been reversed to a purely "neutral technology platform" policy due to "negative reaction towards open source (from the IT market)". This comes after months of hard lobbying by Microsoft Malaysia. This reversal is certainly unfortunate, as the policy has helped raise comfort levels of other policy makers worldwide in pursuing similar goals. The Malaysian Open Source Alliance has published a position statement asking for clarification of the term "neutrality", and has received support from MNC's, local companies and free software developers in Malaysia."
The Internet

Submission + - VC says Second Life is not sustainable

skoobafly writes: "Some VC calls Second Life an incredible innovator but won't be able to get mass market adoption and probably isn't sustainable. She's apparently an old text MUD developer and says that Second Life might be like Prodigy — a walled garden service that ultimately didn't have any long term staying power. Philip Rosedale, Second Life's CEO responds to the blog posts and admits that Second Life has some design flaws. What do you think? Do you think Second Life is all marketing hype? Do you think this is what the mass market wants? What do you think comes next in the virtual world space?"
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Sell your idle cpu cycles

An anonymous reader writes: CPUShare is a research project created by Andrea Arcangeli with the goal of connecting together the computers of the Internet in order to create a general purpose Low Cost and World Wide Supercomputer available to everybody to use in a matter of minutes, controlled by a market for the CPU resources that chooses the price of the CPU resources using the supply and demand law in real time.

It allows the home users to profit from the significant power of their hardware that otherwise would be wasted every day, and is also the first technology that can recycle CPU cycles over the Internet without requiring donations (in terms of electric energy and aging of the CPU) from the home users.

CPUShare might give a NTCO (Negative Total Cost of Ownership) to all the Operative Systems that supports it.

Using the CPUCoins (the CPUCoins are a virtual credit, like in a video game), CPUShare can be optionally used as an energy accumulator, without requiring cash transactions to be useful. After accumulating CPUCoins, users can be allowed to share them with their friends, so that joint supercomputing projects can be developed too.

The CPUShare protocol is open and in turn it provides interoperability to all OS. Currently only x86, x86_64 and powerpc64 CPU resources can be sold with CPUShare, but all architectures can be allowed to join in the future.

CPUShare will contribute to the creation of Open Source Software that will run on top of the CPUShare system. Once a piece of software is ported on top of CPUShare it might cost the same price to run it for 24 hours on a single CPU or to run it for 1 hour on 24 CPUs.

Since all CPUShare development has to happen in the spare time in order to maintain overall profitability, CPUShare development is proceeding quite slow but it's steady.
The Courts

Submission + - Six DMCA Exemptions Granted

Xenographic writes: "The US Copyright Office has just announced six new categories of works exempt from the DMCA's prohibition against circumvention of technological measures that control access to the copyrighted works. This is good news for anyone stuck with old computer dongles or games for game consoles that are no longer available, blind people trying to read ebooks, those trying to unlock cellphones, media studies professors, and anyone who was struck by Sony's rootkit. The bad news is that the exceptions are exceedingly narrow due to their limited authority to grant exceptions. For example, the rootkit exception apparently only allows you to circumvent the access controls caused by a rootkit-laden CD, but not to circumvent any usage controls, nor to circumvent the exact same access controls were they on a DVD instead of a CD..."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Tagging the real world

Emily writes: The Guardian has an interesting story about two technologies that let people annotate the real world, allowing you to see what others have to say about a specific place when you pass nearby (even if you don't have a GPS in the case of Navizon). Now, that terrible meal you had can become a cautionary tale on someone else's mobile phone.
A question remains though: how long before the Axis of Evil (the same people that have brought us spam, hacking, spoofing and other similar goodies) will start getting interested by this, making your cell phone pop up like there's no tomorrow? Only time will tell... But in the meantime, this technology promises a lot of fun.
United States

Submission + - Copyright Office Announces DMCA Exceptions

Baricom writes: The Library of Congress Copyright Office published its triennial list of DMCA exceptions today, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation. For the next three years, people can circumvent protections in copy-protected CDs, DVDs, video games, dongles, e-books, and cell phones under very limited circumstances. Unfortunately, space-shifting and DVD backups weren't among the exemptions.
Announcements

Submission + - UK Police to get roadside fingerprinting tools

mormop writes: According to the BBC, British Police will soon be given the tools and permission to finger print people stopped for driving offences using a hand held scanner by the side of the road. As usual the criteria for being scanned is limited but on every prior occasion these things always end up being put to widespread use a year or so down the line. Look at a Police Officer in a funny way and win a free trip onto the National Criminal Records Database.

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