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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 13 declined, 5 accepted (18 total, 27.78% accepted)

Space

Submission + - Did Earth once have multiple moons? (newscientist.com) 2

fyc writes: "A new study from NASA's Ames Research Center has suggested that the collision of Earth and a Mars-sized object that created the Moon may also have resulted in the creation of tiny moonlets on Earth's Lagrangian points. 'Once captured, the Trojan satellites likely remained in their orbits for up to 100 million years, Lissauer and co-author John Chambers of the Carnegie Institution of Washington say. Then, gravitational tugs from the planets would have triggered changes in the Earth's orbit, ultimately causing the moons to become unmoored and drift away or crash into the Moon or Earth.'"
Space

Submission + - Why Soyuz Re-entered Off Course (universetoday.com)

fyc writes: "Universe Today has posted the facts about what really happened when Soyuz TMA-1 had to make an emergency landing 300 miles off course last week. The craft, carrying South Korea's first astronaut, appears to have suffered a technical fault when the descent module carrying the crew and the Soyuz propulsion module failed to separate in time for the re-entry."
Space

Submission + - NASA wants its MMO created for free and for fun (secondlifeherald.com)

fyc writes: "It seems that the educational MMORPG NASA's proposing will no longer have a budget of $3 million. Instead, any prospective development partner is being asked to create and maintain the MMORPG for free under a "non-reimbursable Space Act Agreement". It won't be a one-sided agreement, though. From NASA's RFP: "In exchange for a collaborator's investment to create and manage a NASA-based MMO game for fun and to enhance STEM [science, technology, engineering and mathematics], NASA will consider negotiating brand placement, limited exclusivity and other opportunities.""
Google

Submission + - Google Pages to be replaced by JotSpot (blogspot.com)

fyc writes: "According to a presentation by Scott Johnson, ex-JotSpot executive and recent Google employee, the JotSpot wiki service acquired late last year by Google is to replace Google's own Pages service. The new service will be called as "Google Sites" and will launch next year. From the presentation: "Based on JotSpot collaboration tools, Sites will allow business to set up intranets, project management tracking, customer extranets, and any number of custom sites based on multi-user collaboration.""
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft applies to patent RSS

Cyvros writes: "Microsoft has decided that it wants to patent RSS. The full patent application can be viewed here. Wired's Monkey Bites blog has also covered it.

From the Wired article:
Public outcry quickly followed since Microsoft had little if anything to do with the development of RSS. Dave Winer, the self-described inventor of RSS, lashed out via his blog claiming, "presumably they're eventually going to charge us to use it."

As an aside, it'll be interesting to watch just how Apple and the Linux/BSD crowd will react to this, especially if the patent is granted."

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