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Censorship

Submission + - Man Kept Off Flight Because of Book

bossesjoe writes: "A man was stopped from boarding his flight from Philadelphia to Phoenix when a random luggage search revealed a copy of Hayduke Lives! by Edward Abbey. The book prominently features a bomber on the cover holding sticks of dynamite and was enough for the security officials to detain him. Later he was also told because he purchased his ticket on September 11th, 2001 (even though it was before the attacks) and because of his expired driver's license (which was not expired) that could not take the flight. After purchasing another ticket for a later date he again detained and searched but was allowed to pass through security forty five minutes after being cleared. Is this what airport security has come to?"

Feed Calls for WiFi safety inquiry to be carried out in UK (engadget.com)

Filed under: Household, Wireless

The UK paper The Independent on Sunday has been thinking of the children recently with a headline article today proclaiming that children are at risk from WiFi signals, or what it sensationally calls "electronic smog." Their motivation for putting WiFi into an almost satanic light are calls by the UK Health Protection Agency to hold an investigation into the safety of WiFi signals. That's fair enough: even if most of the mania surrounding the safety (or lack thereof) of wireless networks is unjustified, an inquiry should put the record straight, right? Still, when another of the bodies that is calling for the inquiry -- the Department of Education and Skills -- calls wireless area networks "magical," it gives the increasing panic over WiFi a rather depressing perspective. Why exactly children are being used to justify an inquiry is a question that needs to be answered too, since the number of homes and workplaces equipped with WiFi must surely outnumber primary and secondary schools. That's before you factor in the prevalence of cordless phones and an array of other wireless kit in the home, which operate on the same 2.4GHz frequency that the majority of routers do. Unfortunately, our expectation is that an inquiry will lead to the same kind of back and forth arguments about the safety of mobile phones and their masts, and not any kind of clarity over this almost manufactured controversy. It certainly doesn't help for WiFi to be branded a "radiation threat" before an inquiry has even been agreed upon.

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

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It's funny.  Laugh.

The Germs' Drummer Arrested For Carrying Soap 384

dwrugh writes "The drummer for the seminal punk band The Germs, Don Bolles, was arrested in Orange County because a field-test kit indicated his bottle of Dr. Bronner's soap contained GHB, the date-rape drug. (Here is an interview with Bolles.) Using the same test kit, available on the web for $20 for a pack of 10, according to Bolles' attorney on NBC this morning, other soaps tested positive for GHB. But of course since it's just soap, when you test it in a real crime lab it comes back negative. Makes you wonder what other common household products also test positive, and how many others have been arrested based on faulty test kits who didn't have the resources to defend themselves."
Google

Submission + - Google rebrands Froogle to Products Search

Streambox.co.uk writes: "Google has rebanded its Froogle service as Google Product Search — Froogle was launched in late 2002 when it was trendy for portals to have vertical sites dedicated to specific industries or areas. But the site didn't grow fast, and Google removed the link to the site from its main page last year. Google Product Search also will boost awareness of Google Checkout online payment service by allowing searchers to set the results to display only items from merchants that offer a Google Checkout option. Further information — http://news.com.com/2100-1038_3-6177393.html?part= rss&tag=2547-1023_3-0-5&subj=news"
Power

Submission + - Earth Day Geekery: Best Eco-Tech of 2007 (So Far)

kitzilla writes: "Hybrid/Organic LED lighting. Hyper-efficient solar cells. Practical wave power. So far, 2007 has been a barnburner year for environmental technology. Here's an interesting list of some of more practical, market-bound examples. Looks like companies realize "green" is also the color of money."
Hardware Hacking

Is Your GPS Naive? 291

mi writes "Many GPS devices today will try to scan the FM bands for traffic advisories in the area to display on their screens. The signals, however, are neither authenticated nor encrypted, and one can — with commonly available electronics — construct a device to broadcast bogus advisories. Possible codes range from "bullfight ahead" to "terrorist attack"..."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Wi-fi and Health Issues

tauslu writes: ""It's on every high street and in every coffee shop and school. But experts have serious concerns about the effects of electronic smog from wireless networks linking our laptops and mobiles, reports Geoffrey Lean""
Encryption

Submission + - Oldest math problem (prime numbers) solved

Kibbles5757 writes: "Independent scientist James McCanney has solved the prime number problem using a rigorous 7-part mathematical proof. The proof includes six of the main properties of prime numbers: symmetry, reciprocity, closure (using the operation of addition) and the infinite wavelike nature of prime numbers. Seven pieces of the puzzle had to be put together in an intricate, interwoven pattern. These provided the solution to directly calculate the prime numbers. McCanney claims that only the most sophisticated mathematicians will be able to pick up the rigorous proof and understand it on first reading. He says there is an overall pattern to the prime numbers and that the prime numbers are not random. They are in fact extremely orderly; one just has to find that order, an order that is "locked in the numbers".

http://www.calculateprimes.com/"
Announcements

Submission + - YEurope: YCombinator Clone launches in Austria

An anonymous reader writes: YCombinator clone YEurope, a venture firm investing in extremely early-stage european ICT-Startups has just opened their call for applications. From July to September the founders of up to 8 startups will have the chance to come to Vienna and work on their startups. They'll be accepting and fund teams of 1-3 people working on technology startups.
Music

Submission + - Music formats and the future

dheera writes: "In digitizing my CD albums to my computer for personal use on portable devices, I'm debating whether I should encode them to MP3 or Ogg format. While I support patent-free formats and have a feeling that Ogg sounds better at a given bitrate, I fear that in the long-run, Vorbis will be forgotten, especially now that very few hardware players natively support it, and that my entire collection will have to be re-digitized to MP3 or some other format too soon. What do you recommend — will Ogg Vorbis continue to hold up and will it continue to be an accessible format for, say, the next 10 years?"

Feed Nano-nose sniffs out sickness (pheedo.com)

A panel of nanoparticles is being trained to detect the 'scent' of illness by detecting particular combinations of proteins in body fluids

Technology (Apple)

Submission + - Apple patent posits live desktop, ala Win XP

Webster Phreaky writes: The future Mac OS X desktop may be a feast of moving images with little or no impact on system performance, a recent Apple patent filing suggests. http://www.macworld.co.uk/news/index.cfm?RSS Trouble is that Windows 2000 and XP has had "Active Desktop" with Internet content and video capabilities SINCE Windows 2000!! Good ol Apple, reinvention is the life of Apple iNOvation.
Communications

gTalk To Get Video Boost? 89

lotusleaf writes "According to an article at PCWorld, "Google Inc. has bought video conferencing software from Marratech AB", "The client software runs on Windows 2000 or XP, Mac OS X 10.4, or versions of Linux". Could this provide a cross-platform video conferencing boost to gTalk?"
Privacy

Submission + - Personal data exposed! Can legislation fix it?

rabblerouzer writes: "Millions have had their personal information stolen because of lax security and may not even know it because of the patchwork of state laws that fail to mandate timely notification of victims. Boston-based law firm Mintz Levin is seeking feedback on what you would like to see included in draft legislation. You have a stake in this; speak up."

Feed Dell Tablet PC coming this Fall? (engadget.com)

Filed under: Tablet PCs

We've been hearing rumors about a possible Dell Tablet PC pretty much since the day the first Tablet PCs went on sale, is it finally going to happen now? None of this is officially confirmed or anything, but jkOnTheRun (which has tons of cred when it comes to this stuff) reports that Dell is probably going to roll out a Tablet PC sometime around September or October of this year and that it will most likely be a convertible-style Tablet based on the Latitude D420 and come with a widescreen display and optional WWAN.

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

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