Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Medicine

Submission + - Is Daylight Saving Time Bad for You?

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "Time Magazine reports that according to experts on circadian rhythms, the hour shift in sleep schedule from Daylight Savings Time can have serious effects on some people's health, particularly in people with certain pre-existing health problems with one study finding that men were more likely to commit suicide during the first few weeks of Daylight Saving Time (DST) than at any other time during the year and another study showing that the number of serious heart attacks jumps 6% to 10% on the first three workdays after DST begins. Dr. Xiaoyong Yang, an assistant professor of comparative medicine and cellular and molecular physiology at Yale University, theorizes that shifts in biologic rhythms could trigger harmful inflammatory or metabolic changes at the cellular level, which these individuals may be more susceptible to. "Most people don't have much of a problem — they can adjust their body clock quickly. Eventually, after a couple of days, they already can adapt to the new schedule," says Yang. "But for some groups of people — people who have depression or a heart problem — there's some research that suggests that [they] have a higher risk of suicide and heart attack.""

Comment Couldn't find credentials (Score 1) 1

This site could be very informative, but I'm not going to trust advice on how to raise my teen from someone who doesn't list credentials. I couldn't even find a name for who runs the site. In the site disclaimer it even says: "The materials contained on this website are provided for general information only and do not constitute any form of advice. We assume no responsibility for the accuracy of any particular statement and accept no liability for any loss or damage that may arise from reliance on the information contained on this site."

Might be helpful, but I love my kid too much to risk it.

Idle

Submission + - A Game Played in the URL Bar (extremetech.com)

Kilrah_il writes: Whether you think it is useful or useless, you can't ignored the sheer cool geekiness of a game played entirely in the URL bar. "... this self-described "ridiculous" project was developed over the course of one evening."
Apple

Submission + - iPad 2 teardown shows tablet's guts (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Apple's iPad 2 tablet, which became available Friday, boasts a big battery, tiny speakers, an ample 512MB of RAM and a glass front that's tricky for tinkerers to take off. That's the upshot from an initial teardown of the new Apple tablet by iFixit, which specializes in Apple product repair. IFixit warns that those who dare to peer into the insides of the iPad 2 on their own risk cracking the glass front panel, which is thinner than that from the original iPad (0.62 mm vs. 0.85 mm) and glued on rather than attached via tabs. A heat gun was needed by iFixit to disassemble the device.
Security

Submission + - The emergency internet bunkers (pcpro.co.uk)

Barence writes: "Should the Doomsday Clock ever strike midnight we may well discover, finally, whether or not the internet really could survive a nuclear conflict. If it could, then a handful of datacenters dotted around the world would likely to be all that remains of the multi-billion-pound hosting industry. These secretive, high-security sites, tunnelled out of mountains or housed behind the blast-proof doors of one-time Nato bunkers, are home to the planet’s most secure hosting providers. PC Pro profiles the emergency internet bunkers."
Twitter

Submission + - First Brit prosecuted over Twitter Libel (bbc.co.uk)

Tasha26 writes: A former town Mayor, Colin Elsbury, made legal history yesterday by being first Brit to pay damages for libel on Twitter. His tweet on polling day said "It's not in our nature to deride our opponents however Eddie Talbot had to be removed by the Police from a polling station" amounted to pure election slur. The Twitter libel was settled at Cardiff High Court with total bill hitting £53,000 (£3,000 compensation + £50,000 legal fees). The fine works out at more than £2,400 per word. After Courtney Love recent £260k settlement in a Twibel case, this case reaffirms that anything posted in the public domain is subject to libel laws.
Firefox

Submission + - Investigating the Performance of Firefox 4 and IE9 (mozillazine.org)

theweatherelectric writes: Mozilla's Robert O'Callahan has posted an article on his blog in which he investigates the performance differences between Firefox 4 and IE9. He writes, 'As I explained in my last post, Microsoft's PR about "full hardware acceleration" is a myth. But it's true that some graphics benchmarks consistently report better scores for IE9 than for Firefox, so over the last few days I've been looking into that. Below I'll explain the details [of] what I've found about various commonly-cited benchmarks, but the summary is that the performance differences are explained by relatively small bugs in Firefox, bugs in IE9, and bugs in the benchmarks, not due to any major architectural issues in Firefox (as Microsoft would have you believe).'
Education

Submission + - IBM Patenting HAL-Like Stuffed Animal Toys 1

theodp writes: 'Look, Dave,' said HAL. 'I can see you're really upset about this. I honestly think you ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill and think things over.' Put a HAL 9000 in a baby's stuffed animal toy, a toddler's EEG-equipped knit cap, or other interactive monitoring device, and you've got the gist of IBM Research's just-published patent application for its Adaptive System for Real-Time Behavioral Coaching and Command Intermediation. 'For example,' explains Big Blue, 'to help a child who plays rough with other children the interaction data can include multiple interaction operations that can be performed by the interactive device for helping the child play less rough with other children. For example, one interaction operation can include an audible warning telling the child 'to play nice' in a strict tone of voice, whereas another interaction operation can include an audible warning that asks the child 'would you like someone to do that to you' in a softer tone of voice along with a visual cue as well.' Hey, spare the Ludovico technique and spoil the child. Welcome to a Smarter Planet, kiddies!

Comment From 21 to over 50; more complete list below (Score 1) 242

The offending apps from publisher Myournet:

Falling Down; Super Guitar Solo; Super History Eraser; Photo Editor; Super Ringtone Maker; Super Sex Positions; Hot Sexy Videos; Chess; _Falldown; Hilton Sex Sound; Screaming Sexy Japanese Girls; Falling Ball Dodge; Scientific Calculator; Dice Roller; ; Advanced Currency Converter; App Uninstaller; _PewPew; Funny Paint; Spider Man;

Over 30 more have been found by Lookout:

owling Time; Advanced Barcode Scanner; Supre Bluetooth Transfer; Task Killer Pro; Music Box; Sexy Girls: Japanese; Sexy Legs; Advanced File Manager; Magic Strobe Light; ; Panzer Panic; Mr. Runner; ; Advanced App to SD; Super Stopwatch & Timer; Advanced Compass Leveler; Best password safe; ; ; Finger Race; Piano; Bubble Shoot; Advanced Sound Manager; Magic Hypnotic Spiral; Funny Face; Color Blindness Test; Tie a Tie; Quick Notes; Basketball Shot Now; Quick Delete Contacts; Omok Five in a Row; Super Sexy Ringtones; ; ;

Submission + - World's Most Powerful Optical Microscope (sciencedaily.com)

gamricstone writes: Scientists have produced the world's most powerful optical microscope, which could help understand the causes of many viruses and diseases. Previously, the standard optical microscope can only see items around one micrometre — 0.001 millimetres — clearly. But now, by combining an optical microscope with a transparent microsphere, dubbed the 'microsphere nanoscope', the Manchester researchers can see 20 times smaller — 50 nanometres ((5 x 10-8m) — under normal lights. This is beyond the theoretical limit of optical microscopy. "Seeing inside a cell directly without dying and seeing living viruses directly could revolutionize the way cells are studied and allow us to examine closely viruses and biomedicine for the first time."

Slashdot Top Deals

And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones

Working...