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Submission + - Seagate CEO: We Are Good for Porn

VE3OGG writes: "Seagate CEO Bill Watkins recently made a comment that he may be regretting for a while when he said what is probably one of the most candid statements ever, from any one, to a Fortune magazine interviewer: "Let's face it, we're not changing the world. We're building a product that helps people buy more crap — and watch porn." It was like a thousand PR people all cried out at once and then were suddenly silence."
Programming

Submission + - Mellon Bank roundoff errors generate small checks

twasserman writes: "Mellon Investor Services sent a letter to HP Share Ownership Plan members reporting that they "discovered that the rounding logic" they "had been using resulted in miscalculated dividends and proceeds amounts during the period of April 2001 through September 2004." Mellon changed their rounding logic and re-calculated every transaction for this period, then issued checks to reflect the difference. My check, sent by first class mail, was for $0.02, and arrived just in time for last minute holiday shopping. A set of FAQs, which accompanied the check, noted that bank charges may make it infeasible for recipients to deposit or cash the check."
Music

Submission + - Alabama Man Beats RIAA Motion Without Lawyer

Microsoft

Microsoft Applies to Patent RSS in Vista 119

Cyvros wrote in with a link to Wired's Monkey Bites blog, which is featuring a post on Microsoft applying for a patent on RSS. As the article points out, this isn't as crazy as it seems at first blush. From the wording of the application, post author Scott Gilbertson interprets their move as a patent on RSS only within Vista and IE7. From the article: "The big mystery is what Microsoft is planning to do with the patents if they are awarded them. The sad state of patent affairs in the United States has led to several cases of Microsoft being sued for technologies they did arguably invent simply because some else owned a generic patent on them. Of course we have no way of knowing how Microsoft intends to use these patents if they are awarded them. They could represent a defensive move, but they could be offensive as well -- [self-described RSS inventor Dave] Winer may end up being correct. It would be nice to see Microsoft release some information on what they plan to do with these patents, but for now we'll just have to wait and see whether the US Patent and Trademark Office grants them."
Censorship

White House Forces Censorship of New York Times 356

VE3OGG writes "It would seem that scientists are not the only ones facing censorship from the White House. According to several news sources the New York Times originally had intended to run an article co-authored by a former employee of the National Security Council, critical of the current administration's policies toward Iran. The article had passed the CIA's publication review board, but was later redacted on orders from the White House. Article authors Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann were former advisers to the White House, and thus all of their publications are scrutinized by a board before they can be published. Of the numerous documents this pair has published since leaving their positions, they say this was the first that was actively censored.
Books

Submission + - Classical Chinese Combinatorics

h9xh9xh9x writes: A computational linguist in a federally-funded research project at UC Berkeley has solved a 3,000 year-old mystery, in a new book entitled Classical Chinese Combinatorics. A mathematical proof found hidden in an ancient Chinese text shows how the Chinese invented binary mathematics 600 years before the time of Euclid.

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Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"

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