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Scientists Offer New Way to Read Online Text 404

An anonymous reader writes "Scientists at a small startup called Walker Reading Technologies in Minnesota have determined that the human brain is not wired properly to read block text. They have found that our eyes view text as if they're peering through a straw. Not only does your brain see the text on the line you're reading, but it's also uploading superfluous information from the two lines above and the two lines below. This causes your brain to engage in a tug of war as it fights to filter and ignore the noise. The result is slower reading speeds and decreased comprehension. The company has developed a product that automatically re-formats text in a way that your brain can more easily comprehend."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Lawsuit Invokes DMCA to Force DRM Adoption 332

TechnicolourSquirrel writes "Forbes.com informs us that the company Media Rights Technologies is suing Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, and Real Networks for not using its DRM technology and therefore 'failing to include measures to control access to copyrighted material.' The company alleges that their refusal to use MRT's X1 Recording Control technology constitutes a 'circumvention' of a copyright protection system, which is of course illegal under the Digital Millenium Copryight Act. I would say more, but without controlling access to this paragraph with MRT's products, I fear I have already risked too much ..."

Comment Re:Diminishing returns for penny pinching (Score 1) 321

I couldn't agree more. Over the last ten years my family has owned a series of commercial low end computers from HP, Dell, and eMachines. Each one has crapped out after 3-4 years. The PC I built from scratch, in 1999, still running. Despite being moved ~6 times and hundreds of miles, numerous hard drive additions and removals, living for months at a time without a side panel, and residing for the past year in my parents' garage, unheated or cooled, it is still going strong, nearly seven years since it was built. I truly believe that the big companies put inferior components into their consumer PCs, knowing that consumers as a whole do not have institutional memories like the tech support and purchasing departments of large companies and governmental offices.

Red

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