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Silk Road Trial Defense: Mt. Gox CEO Was the Real Dread Pirate Roberts 119

rossgneumann writes The defense team for Ross Ulbricht, the 30-year-old man accused of running the online black market Silk Road under the pseudonym Dread Pirate Roberts, just dropped an unexpected new theory: Mark Karpeles, the CEO of failed Bitcoin company Mt. Gox, is the real Dread Pirate Roberts. "We have the name of the real mastermind and it's not Ulbricht," Joshua Dratel, Ulbricht's lawyer, said in court today. He plans to argue that Karpeles framed Ulbricht.

Comment In my experience, AT&T is awful as an ISP (Score 0) 230

I waited years for AT&T to offer UVerse to my home in Austin, and when they finally did, all they offered was 12Mbps. I repeatedly told them (as recently as January of this year) that I wanted more bandwidth, and they repeatedly told me they wouldn't be upgrading "my area" further anytime soon (78736). Screw AT&T. I hope Google (and others nationwide) whip your lackadaisical asses into oblivion.

Comment Very Interesting (Score 0) 128

The question now will be how long it takes before the drivers (OpenCL, DirectX, OpenGL) and even the OSes themselves can take advantage of the architecture. And once that's done, AMD would be wise to work directly with the big compilers (gcc, Clang, msvc, and Intel if they would do it) to allow developers to flip a bit so that the RTLs could use OpenCL for as many math calculations as possible. After all, this is just one step closer to performing nearly all floating point math on the "math-coprocessor" (aka GPU).

Submission + - North Korean missile in upright firing position (cnn.com) 1

An anonymous reader writes: North Korea has raised at least one missile into its upright firing position, feeding concerns that a launch is imminent, a U.S. official told CNN Thursday.
This comes as the world continued to keep watch for a possible missile launch by the secretive government, and a day before U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to arrive in the region.
In the latest daily tough talk from the North, a government agency is quoted by the state-run media as saying that "war can break out any moment."

Microsoft

Submission + - IE6 still strong in China (conceivablytech.com)

RackNine writes: "Net Applications estimates that IE6 has a share of 33.8% in China, StatCounter estimates about 40.2%.

Consider the fact that there are currently about 477 million Internet users in China and you get 160 to 192 million IE6 users.

That is potentially more than all Internet users in Africa and the Middle East combined (187 million)."

Submission + - Neanderthals mated with human (eurekalert.org)

Med-trump writes: Neanderthals, whose ancestors left Africa about 400,000 to 800,000 years ago, evolved in what is now mainly France, Spain, Germany and Russia, and are thought to have lived until about 30,000 years ago. Now scientists have identified a piece of Neanderthal DNA (called a haplotype) in the human X chromosome and conclude that this haplotype is present because of mating with our ancestors and Neanderthals. The study was published in the latest issue of the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution.
Cellphones

Droid X Gets Rooted 97

An anonymous reader writes "The Droid X forums have posted a procedure to root the new Motorola Droid X, putting to rest Andoid fans' fears that they would never gain access to the device's secrets due to a reported eFuse that would brick the phone if certain boot files were tampered with. Rooting the phone is the first step in gaining complete control over the device."

Comment Re:TiVo invented timeshifting? (Score 0, Troll) 490

One could argue that if innovation moves far enough past the initial idea, it indeed qualifies as reinventing. While the rest of us pony up and recognize what an innovation Tivo was, you're of course free to continue to express your technical objections by shuffling your VCR tapes, having your VCR flash "12:00am", and looking up the upcoming TV schedule with your TVGuide and setting VCRPlus to record shows. The rest of us will use our DVRs and not have to worry about adjusting the tracking.
Graphics

DirectX 11 Coming To Browser Games 200

arcticstoat writes "Forget Farmville, Flash puzzlers and 8-bit home computer emulators. The next generation of browser games will be able to take advantage of DirectX 11 effects, not to mention multi-core processing and both Havok and PhysX physics effects. A new browser plug-in called WebVision will be available for Trinergy's new game engine, Vision Engine 8. This will enable game developers to port all the advanced effects from the game engine over to all the common browsers. Of course, any budding 3D-browser-game dev will face the problem that not every PC has a decent graphics card that can handle advanced graphics effects. Not only that, but limited bandwidth will also limit what effects a developer can realistically implement into a browser game. Nevertheless, this is an interesting development that could result in some tight 3D programming, as well as some much more interesting browser games."

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