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Cellphones

James Murdoch's Defense Crumbles 272

Hugh Pickens writes "Brian Cathcart writes that whatever happens to News Corp., it will surely happen without James Murdoch, the clever, dashing heir apparent to his buccaneer father, Rupert, who has become a liability with little hope of survival. James Rupert told members of Parliament that when he approved a payment of about $1.1 million in 2008 to settle the first lawsuit brought by a phone-hacking victim, he was not shown an email that suggested phone hacking was more widespread at the News of the World, and not limited to one 'rogue' reporter. 'He is saying one thing—that in briefing him they gave an "incomplete picture" — and, remarkably, in a statement Thursday, they publicly denied that,' writes Cathcart. All the News Corp. executives used to tell the same story but one by one as the pressure has grown these people have been cast off or have drifted away and now as the little group has splintered and scattered, and they all need to save their own skins. 'It's not just James who is done,' writes David Carr in the NY Times. 'Rupert Murdoch, as we have long known him, is done as well.'"

Comment This scales to your stack and apps as well (Score 1) 216

DragonWriter sort of hit on this - and I'll leave the whole 'start over' concept to Joel and that older thread that seems to surface every few years. I don't develop software, I run an IT shop. And this issue bites me all the time - band-aiding apps and communications together until you don't know what is driving what.

You see, I'm constantly battling application creep - sometimes it's unavoidable because there really are not many options for some specialized needs. Sometimes I don't get to choose - it was purchased and the first I hear of it is to install. Although I'm morally in the clear to say 'go screw' - it's wasting money in the truest sense and I can limit that by 'getting it to work'. Now we hit on Weigel's post on technical dept. In an application - this might be easier to measure. With infrastructure, it's harder to document these future issues or temporary workarounds in some meaningful manner (open to suggestions). You of course are reminded when they bite you, but faced with time pressures of broken processes, wailing users, and the scramble to fix - the fix doesn't always get the proper attention it really needs. Again, we'll do the 'real' fix next week. (lather, rinse, repeat).

On the hardware front, sure I often get to choose the vendor and product - but it's still gotta perform some needed function - and at times I get to choose from bad, or really bad, or just won't work. I also have both inherited and purchased various servers that were available cheap or free (you keep on using that word - I don't think it means what you think it does), and then deal with odd ways of dealing with things like authentication, unique settings and variables (example = unique ways to identify 'today' or count time), and the growing skill set to maintain them. Again, not by choice or design, but by the reality of larger institutions.

I'd love to see or hear about ways to minimize this - or at least fend it off fairly well. I'm certain I'm not alone - but keep in mind the politics and realities of being in a larger institution.
Google

Building Left 4 Dead Maps With Google Sketchup 44

notthatwillsmith writes "If you're a fan of Left 4 Dead and you've ever wanted to build a zombie-filled map of your hometown, office or grocery store, Maximum PC just posted a how-to that shows you how to convert photos of real-world locations into ready-to-play L4D 1 or 2 maps. It's everything you need to know in order to kill zombies with your friends — in the comfort of your own backyard."
PlayStation (Games)

US Air Force Buying Another 2,200 PS3s 144

bleedingpegasus sends word that the US Air Force will be grabbing up 2,200 new PlayStation 3 consoles for research into supercomputing. They already have a cluster made from 336 of the old-style (non-Slim) consoles, which they've used for a variety of purposes, including "processing multiple radar images into higher resolution composite images (known as synthetic aperture radar image formation), high-def video processing, and 'neuromorphic computing.'" According to the Justification Review Document (DOC), "Once the hardware configuration is implemented, software code will be developed in-house for cluster implementation utilizing a Linux-based operating software."
Censorship

Modern Warfare 2 Not Recalled In Russia After All 94

thief21 writes "After claims that console versions Modern Warfare 2 had been recalled in Russia due to complaints from politicians and the gaming public over the infamous airport slaughter scene, it turns out the stories were completely untrue. Activision never released a console version of the game in Russia." Instead, they simply edited the notorious scene out of the PC version. They did this of their own volition, since Russia doesn't have a formal ratings committee.
Music

Rock Band To Allow Independent Artists To Add Their Own Songs 57

Bakkster writes "Independent artists will be able to use the XNA Creator's Club to produce the Rock Band note-charts for their music and sell them in game later this year. Bands will use their original song masters and generate a MIDI file that produces the game 'gems' to which players can follow along. Tracks must pass a review process with other XNA members, and then a final approval from MTV Games. Songs will be sold for between 50 cents and $3, with the artist getting a 30% cut after MTV and Microsoft take their cut. The best tracks will also make their way to the Wii and PS3 after a 30-day exclusive period."

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