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Businesses

Submission + - Greg KH Offers Free Linux Driver Development!

QuantumG writes: "Kernel hacker Greg KH has made a public offer to develop Linux drivers, for free, to any vendor that is willing to release hardware specifications or make available "an engineer that is willing to answer questions every once in a while." The offer is made in conjunction with the OSDL/TLF Tech Board who are providing a legal framework for managing any NDA requirements that vendors may have. The announcement has been made in the hope that vendors will be more inclined to label their products as "Linux Ready" by reducing developer workload."
Software

Submission + - Spyware: Is Any OS Really Safe?

techie34290 writes: OSWeekly.com discusses the security issues with all OSes and the state of spyware. The author writes, "The reasoning behind us not seeing spyware-type exploits for these two operating systems will remain something of a debate amongst those who have strong opinions. But regardless as to why, up till now we have simply not seen any level of threat followed up with action in the spyware realm for either platform. All along, it has been a Microsoft Windows issue that has plagued common users and power users alike. For Microsoft, it has become something of a PR monster as their credibility as a company continues to come under fire. And then we have Vista, Microsoft's shining hope for the future. For the true believer, it offers some hope to combat the malware headaches of the past.
Media

Submission + - Wikipedia founder's Open Source collaboration tips

destinyland writes: "In a new interview Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales acknowledges his debt to Richard Stallman's Free Software Foundation and discusses his new open source search project. He applauds the way Open Source developers work around their ideological differences, acknowledges that he's an Ayn Rand objectivist who's skeptical of the wisdom of crowds, and blames Slashdot for his grandstanding comment that Wikipedia would bury Encyclopedia Brittanica within five years."
Databases

Jim Gray Is Missing 283

K-Man writes "Jim Gray, Turing Award winner and developer of many fundamental database technologies, was reported missing at sea after a short solo sailing trip to the Farallon Islands off San Francisco. Gray is manager of Microsoft's eScience group. The Coast Guard is searching for his vessel over 4,000 square miles of ocean, and there have been no distress calls or signals of any kind. Gray is 63 and a sailor with 10 years' experience."
Privacy

Submission + - Determining the Racial Factor in Hiring

Shakeel writes: "I'm a college student with an interview coming up soon for an internship with a major corporation that is very prominent in my field. However, this company also has a reputation for being something of a conservative 'old boys' club. They have recently making some not-so-public but noticable steps towards shifting the corporate culture of being younger, and more 'hip.' Part of this has also been an attempt to increase the diversity of the company. I feel that I am fully qualified for the position and would probably be able to get it anyway, but I am ethically opposed to hand outs based on race (I am a minority). Is there any tactful way I can ask someone or find out whether or not my ethinicity is playing a role in the company's interest in me?"
Power

Submission + - Water from wind

ghostcorps writes: Columnist Phillip Adams writes about a new windmill design that literally extracts water from air. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867 ,21123007-12272,00.html


Usually a windmill has three blades facing into the wind. But Whisson's design has many blades, each as aerodynamic as an aircraft wing, and each employing "lift" to get the device spinning. I've watched them whirr into action in Whisson's wind tunnel at the most minimal settings. They start spinning long, long before a conventional windmill would begin to respond. I saw them come alive when a colleague opened an internal door.

And I forgot something. They don't face into the wind like a conventional windmill; they're arranged vertically, within an elegant column, and take the wind from any direction.

The secret of Max's design is how his windmills, whirring away in the merest hint of a wind, cool the air as it passes by. Like many a great idea, it couldn't be simpler — or more obvious. But nobody thought of it before.


With three or four of Max's magical machines on hills at our farm we could fill the tanks and troughs, and weather the drought. One small Whisson windmill on the roof of a suburban house could keep your taps flowing. Biggies on office buildings, whoppers on skyscrapers, could give independence from the city's water supply. And plonk a few hundred in marginal outback land — specifically to water tree-lots — and you could start to improve local rainfall.
Software

Submission + - Insight into viral phenomenon: Population Tagging

Wubi writes: I've seen tagging used on population indexes (such as on amazon.com, and slashdot). I've never seen visual representations of used on both population indexes and individual indexes. That is what this guy seems to be saying should be done for us on many websites. Tag the group lists, tag the individual articles/items seperately. Then rank them one or more ways (visual, alphabetical, checmical composition etc). http://redonkulicity.com/theory.html provided the insight into viral phenomenon. It is manually tagged with caps for popularity and quick reading. And even has a quick kids story recap!

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