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Networking

Submission + - When Is enough bandwidth at home enough? 1

Dubbel writes: In 1993, I was in College and took advantage of a dial up \ SLIP account for internet access from home which my university made available to all students with shell accounts. It was a blazing 14.4Kbps connection. As internet usage increased and I began to get busy signals more often that not, I took advantage of a student discount at a local ISP and got a dial up 33.6 Kbps "Unlimited" PPP service for the princely sum of $40 a month...a significant portion of my net worth at the time. At that point in internet history, online services such as Prodigy and Compuserve were charging by the minute for World Wide Web access which was outside of the content they hosted and this still didn't give you access to the full breadth and depth of what the internet had to offer. I had 1 friend whom I considered to be filthy rich who had a dual channel 128Kbps ISDN line. As soon as broadband became available, I was the first person I new to get it. First it was 1 MBps, then 1.5, then 3 and currently I subscribe to a 6 Mbps DSL service all the while never really exceeding the $40 a month price barrier (now after service bundle discounts and prior to the addition of taxes). Now my ISP is offering their new VDSL internet, TV, & IP telephony service in my area which tops out at a staggering 18 Mbps for around $65 a month which is separate from the bandwidth available for telephony & TV. For the first time ever, I find myself asking....do I really need more bandwidth? Am I ludicrous for asking this question? How many others in the Slashdot community have found their personal broadband saturation point to be beneath fastest service available separate from personal financial constraints?

Submission + - 'Killing in the Name' UK No. 1 thanks to Facebook (bbc.co.uk) 2

Josh04 writes: Due to a 900,000+ Facebook campaign, 90's rap metal group Rage Against the Machine are this year's Christmas number 1, beating out Simon Cowell's X-Factor contestant Joe McElderry to the top spot, making 'Killing in the Name' the first ever UK download-only Christmas number 1. The popular 90's rock song had support from celebrities and the BBC, who got in trouble earlier in the week for allowing five 'fucks' to slip through the censor on a live performance.

Comment One More Time (Score 2, Interesting) 306

Somebody please explain to me why Android matters. What does it have that all the other phone OSs don't? Better APIs? Nicer SDK? I imagine a lot of geeks like the idea of owning a hackable phone, but that's not enough by itself.

Whenever I ask this question, I get answers that only address issues with the iPhone, like the fact that nobody tells you what software you can run on it. Please recall that there are a lot of phone OSs out there.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mobile_phone_operating_systems

Comment Re:Consider the future (Score 1) 278

I agree with your statement. I don't think native apps will go away, but I do think they will be the minority. I use an Android powered phone and the apps I use 95% of the time require that data be pulled from the cloud for some reason or another. Once web apps are allowed to interact more heavily with mobile device and connectivity speed increases, apps that use cloud data will most likely just shift to being web based.

Comment Re:Why do I get (Score 4, Insightful) 108

But in this case they will have a monopoly simply because no one else has bothered to do what they're planning to do. Why should they be punished for being the only ones who want to digitize everything? I read constantly about how horrible it will be that Google will be the only ones doing this, but if people actually thought competition would help, there would already be a competitor.
Science

LHC Has First Collisions After Years of Waiting 324

An anonymous reader writes "Only four days after the first attempt to send a particle beam around the LHC, we have arrived at the point when all four experiments got their first real collisions from the machine. This was met by celebrations and champagne, as people have been waiting years and years for this moment. It is a testament to the engineering of the machine that collisions were reached already, so few days after restarting. The LHC had already demonstrated ca 10h stable beams, and now also stable beams in both directions at the same time. In the coming weeks, we need only wait for increased intensity and the first attempts at acceleration."
NASA

Submission + - SPAM: NASA takes ice hunt Earth-bound

coondoggie writes: While NASA is crashing into the moon to look for ice, it's also looking for the frozen stuff here on Earth, only in a much more conventional way. The space agency said on Oct. 15 it will start a series of 17 flights to study changes to Antarctica's sea ice, glaciers and ice sheets. The flights are part of what NASA calls Operation Ice Bridge, a six-year project that is the largest airborne survey ever made of ice at Earth's polar regions. Researchers will work from NASA's DC-8, an airborne laboratory equipped with laser mapping instruments, ice-penetrating radar and gravity instruments. Data collected from the mission will help scientists better predict how changes to the massive Antarctic ice sheet will contribute to future sea level rise around the world, NASA stated.
[spam URL stripped]

Link to Original Source
Patents

Submission + - Imports of Toyota Prius May Be Banned (bloomberg.com) 1

JynxMe writes: Paice, a tiny Florida company that has patented a way to apply force to a car's wheels from the electric motor or the internal combustion engine.

Paice thinks that Toyota (TM) is infringing on its technology, and is going after the automaker in court. The legal spat became much more serious for Toyota this week, when the U.S. International Trade Commission decided to investigate the matter. In the worst-case scenario for Toyota, the commission could ban the hybrid Camry, third-generation Prius, Lexus HS250h sedan and Lexus RX450h SUV.

Businesses

Submission + - Microsoft, Yahoo Reach 10-Year Search Engine Deal 1

nandemoari writes: "Microsoft has finally acquired long-time search engine rival Yahoo Inc in a 10 year search engine partnership. The deal, which has been in the works on-and-off for over a year has been finalized and made public earlier today. Yahoo agreed to use Microsoft's Bing search engine on its sites, while Microsoft will use Yahoo's search technology. Yahoo will sell ads on both sites and the two companies will share revenue from traffic generated on Yahoo sites. Yahoo expects the partnership will save $275M it would have previously invested in search technology, boosting its annual profit by $500M."
Microsoft

Submission + - Linus: MS Hatred is a Disease

WED Fan writes: "Linus Torvalds has given an interview commenting on Microsoft's recent and on-going contribution of code. In it, he takes a pretty sharp crack at some in the Open Source and/or free software movements:

I may make jokes about Microsoft at times, but at the same time, I think the Microsoft hatred is a disease.

He also decries those bent on hatred and exclusion:

There are 'extremists' in the free software world, but that's one major reason why I don't call what I do 'free software' any more. I don't want to be associated with the people for whom it's about exclusion and hatred.

"

Comment Re:Work Experience (Score 1) 834

Funny.... I Don't have ANY degree but ~10 years experience on networks. Last time I was employed they clearly said that they don't care about degrees, all they cared was what I'm REALLY capable to do. Show me a person who can work out of college/university with all of Cisco/Juniper/Extreme... There is a slight difference with academica and real world. Coding might be different story but most gifted coders I have seen haven't been graduated either.

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