70% of P2P Users Would Stop if Warned by ISP 318
Comment Ops (Score 1) 174
Submission + - Mom blasts Ballmer over kid's crappy Vista OS (computerworld.com) 6
Submission + - RedHat: Customers Can Deploy Linux with Confidence (eweek.com)
Submission + - Student and professor build budget supercomputer (calvin.edu)
NZ, Sweden, Hungary Reflect OOXML Turmoil 146
Submission + - Lunar Eclipse Next Tuesday Morning (space.com)
Submission + - Nanotechnology boosts solar cells performance
Submission + - Electronic Arts delays OS X games (vnunet.com)
Submission + - Building Artificial Bone From Mineralised Collagen
For some time scientists have tried to make nanosized artificial bone materials using various methods, And have recently turned their attention to mineralised collagen, a nanoapatite/collagen composite. This material is highly biocompatible and has the nanostructure of artificial bone. It could be used in bone grafts and bone-tissue engineering, among other applications."
Get Ready For the High-tech Beach 247
Comment I'll tell you why (Score 1) 995
I just wrote a blog post http://www.theteabag.co.uk/ discussing my unhappiness with the current Debian stock kernel and the NVidia drivers which longer compile against it. We need to stop alienating the vendors who only wish to supply us with useful tools to get the job done, and yes, their code is proprietary, but ultimately, its the users who are made to suffer.
I mean, I couldn't get my dad to compile his own kernel, hell, I have enough trouble getting him to boil a kettle. So what is his answer when I tell him that either he pays for a new graphics card or uses an older kernel, or changes his distribution. I understand that choice is the beauty of the open source movement, but he is used to using a particular distro, and besides why should he have to?
Just my £0.02
Submission + - Replacing Silicone with Pencil Graphite
Graphene, a one-atom-thick sheet of carbon, eluded scientists for years but was finally made in the laboratory in 2004 with the help of everyday, store-bough items. This research is an important first step, For developing a way to mass produce metallic graphene that could one day replace copper as the primary interconnect material on nearly all computer chips."