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Submission + - QT 5.4 Features Announced

chemdream78 writes: QT Project has announced what's new and Deprecated in 5.4. New features are primarily OpenGL updates. 5.4's feature freeze is August 8th with a planned release date of October 23rd. Hopefully this list will grow before the feature freeze!

Submission + - 3D Printing By Karl Marx

An anonymous reader writes: Karl Marx basically said those that control the means of production are those which have the power. As 3D printing has potential to empower local and distributive manufacturing, will we see some positive progress in our consumer led economies like the U.S and U.K? In particular, does addtive manufacturing hold out promise for improving trade deficits with Asia and a reducing environmental pollution caused by mass production and the supply chain. For more details see -http://www.3dprintwise.com/3d-printing-future/ . — It gets to the point of what has happened in our economies and what the future may hold.

Submission + - HP Just Unveiled The Machine - A New Type of Computer (businessweek.com)

pacopico writes: HP Labs is trying to make a comeback. According to Businessweek, HP is building something called The Machine. It's a type of server that will use memristors for memory and silicon photonics for interconnects and ship possibly by 2017 (good luck). As for The Machine's software, HP plans to build three open source operating systems, including a new one from scratch and its own versions of Linux and Android. The new computer is meant to solve a coming crisis due to limitations around DRAM and Flash. About three-quarters of HP Labs personnel are working on this project.

Submission + - Civilization V Officially Available on Linux for SteamOS (aspyr.com)

jrepin writes: Aspyr Media, in partnership with 2K and Firaxis Games, announced that the critically acclaimed Sid Meier’s Civilization V, and all available expansion packs and downloadable content, is now available on Linux for SteamOS. The title includes Steam Play support. This release of Sid Meier’s Civilization V on Linux targets SteamOS and features support for Valve’s upcoming Steam Controller.

Submission + - Cisco opposes net neutrality (computerworld.com.au)

angry tapir writes: All bits running over the Internet are not equal and should not be treated that way by broadband providers, despite net neutrality advocates' calls for traffic neutral regulations, Cisco Systems has said. Some Web-based applications, including rapidly growing video services, home health monitoring and public safety apps, will demand priority access to the network, while others, like most Web browsing and email, may live with slight delays, said Jeff Campbell, Cisco's vice president for government and community relations. "Different bits do matter differently. We need to ensure that we have a system that allows this to occur."

Submission + - Docker 1.0 Released

Graculus writes: Industry heavyweights line up at inaugural DockerCon user conference to support Docker as the de facto standard for Linux containers. Docker, the company that sponsors the Docker.org open source project, is gaining allies in making its commercially supported Linux container format a de facto standard. Linux containers are a way of packaging up applications and related software for movement over the network or Internet. Once at their destination, they launch in a standard way and enable multiple containers to run under a single host operating system.

Submission + - Solving logic puzzles in FORTRAN 1

dr_blurb writes: Computational nanoscientist Surendra Jain has written solvers for Sudoku, Killer Sudoku, Samurai Sudoku, Calcudoku, Kakuro and many other logic problems.

The page (called "Classical Geek") has all source (in Fortran 90) as well as compilation and running instructions. This is further proof that FORTRAN is still very much alive. Is it the most suitable language for this type of logic puzzle solver?

Submission + - Mesa 10.2 Improves Linux's Open-Source Graphics Drivers (phoronix.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Mesa 10.2 was introduced this week as the new shining example of what open source graphics (and open source projects in general) are capable of achieving. The latest release of this often underrepresented open source graphics driver project has many new OpenGL and driver features including a number of new OpenGL 4 extensions implemented, the reverse-engineered Freedreno driver now poses serious competition to Qualcomm's Adreno driver, an OpenMAX implementation was added for Radeon video encoding support, Intel Broadwell support now works better, the software rasterizer supports OpenGL 3.3, and many other changes are present.

Submission + - id Software's Softdisk games code being released under GPL (geek.com)

An anonymous reader writes: id Software has a long history of making games that stems back as far as 1991. A number of those games were published by Softdisk — the company where the id Software founders originally met. And those games remain the property of Softdisk, which is now owned by Flat Rock Software. Now it seems, Flat Rock is making the Softdisk code available for id’s classic titles.

Submission + - FSF publishes Email Self-Defense Guide and infographic (fsf.org)

gnujoshua writes: The FSF has published a (rather beautiful) infographic and guide to encrypting your email using GnuPG. In their blog post announcing the guide they write:

One year ago today, an NSA contractor named Edward Snowden went public with his history-changing revelations about the NSA's massive system of indiscriminate surveillance. Today the FSF is releasing Email Self-Defense, a guide to personal email encryption to help everyone, including beginners, make the NSA's job a little harder. We're releasing it as part of Reset the Net, a global day of action to push back against the surveillance-industrial complex.


Submission + - Could Amazon start selling FLAC music files? (amazon.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Something is brewing over at Amazon, where their MP3 store was just renamed Digital Music store. It appears as though they want to distance themselves from mp3s, and hopefully start to sell a lossless format like FLAC. There are very high bitrates with OGG as well, and although that is a lossy format, they could be interested in higher quality music. This would be great for consumers that no longer need the plastic, but want the highest quality music available. Would you like to see FLAC at Amazon?

Submission + - Star Within a Star: Thorne-Zytkow Object Discovered (discovery.com)

astroengine writes: A weird type of ‘hybrid’ star has been discovered nearly 40 years since it was first theorized — but until now has been curiously difficult to find. In 1975, renowned astrophysicists Kip Thorne, of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena, Calif., and Anna Zytkow, of the University of Cambridge, UK, assembled a theory on how a large dying star could swallow its neutron star binary partner, thus becoming a very rare type of stellar hybrid, nicknamed a Thorne-Zytkow object (or TZO). The neutron star — a dense husk of degenerate matter that was once a massive star long since gone supernova — would spiral into the red supergiant’s core, interrupting normal fusion processes. According to the Thorne-Zytkow theory, after the two objects have merged, an excess of the elements rubidium, lithium and molybdenum will be generated by the hybrid. So astronomers have been on the lookout for stars in our galaxy, which is thought to contain only a few dozen of these objects at any one time, with this specific chemical signature in their atmospheres. Now, according to Emily Levesque of the University of Colorado Boulder and her team, a bona fide TZO has been discovered and their findings have been accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters.

Submission + - EFF Tells Court That The NSA Knowingly And Illegally Destroyed Evidence (techdirt.com)

An anonymous reader writes: We followed the back and forth situation earlier this year, in which there were some legal questions over whether or not the NSA needed to hang onto surveillance data at issue in various lawsuits, or destroy it as per the laws concerning retention of data. Unfortunately, in the process, it became clear that the DOJ misled FISA court Judge Reggie Walton, withholding key information. In response, the DOJ apologized, insisting that it didn't think the data was relevant — but also very strongly hinting that it used that opportunity to destroy a ton of evidence. However, this appeared to be just the latest in a long history of the NSA/DOJ willfully destroying evidence that was under a preservation order.

The key case where this evidence was destroyed was the EFF's long running Jewel v. NSA case, and the EFF has now told the court about the destruction of evidence, and asked the court to thus assume that the evidence proves, in fact, that EFF's clients were victims of unlawful surveillance. The DOJ/NSA have insisted that they thought that the EFF's lawsuit only covered programs issued under executive authority, rather than programs approved by the FISA Court, but the record in the case shows that the DOJ seems to be making this claim up.

Submission + - Pirate Bay Co-Founder Peter Sunde Arrested in Sweden (torrentfreak.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Peter Sunde was arrested today in a police raid in southern Sweden. The Pirate Bay co-founder was wanted by Interpol as he had yet to serve prison time for his involvement with the site. Sunde's arrest comes exactly eight years after the police raided the Pirate Bay servers, which marked the start of the criminal prosecution against the site's founders.

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