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Education

Submission + - Barter-Based School Catching on Globally (shareable.net)

sethopia writes: "In 2010, three people had the crazy idea to start a school where the teachers teach whatever they want and the students pay for classes with whatever teachers need—cutlery, art, advice—but never with money. Trade Schools have been popping up around the world and are now active in 15 cities and 10 countries, with almost no prodding from its founders. Caroline Woolard, one of the founders, discusses the challenges and opportunities of adapting their idea to an international audience and making the Trade School software—based on Python and Django—great."
Power

Submission + - Employers Need Wind Power Technicians

Hugh Pickens writes writes: "NPR reports that Oklahoma is one state benefitting from the energy boom but with a wind power rush underway companies care competing to secure the windiest spots while breathing life into small towns. But the problem is each turbine requires regular maintenance during its 20-year lifespan with a requirement of one turbine technician for every 10 turbines on the ground, so even with a job that can pay a good starting salary technicians with a GED or high school diploma who complete a four-week turbine maintenance training program, there aren't enough qualified technicians to do the work. "It seems odd, with America's unemployment problem, to have a shortage of workers for a job that can pay in excess of $20 per hour. But being a turbine technician isn't easy," says Logan Layden adding that technicians typically have to climb 300 foot high towers to service the turbines. Oscar Briones is one of about a dozen students who recently finished a maintenance training program after leaving his job as a motorcycle mechanic and now has his pick of employers. "So I was in the market to find something else to do, and this seemed pretty exciting. Being 300 feet in the air, that's pretty exciting in its self. So yeah, I'm a thrill seeker.""
Space

Submission + - Want to see a supernova in your backyard ? (everythingnew.net)

hasanabbas1987 writes: "So what if you can catch a glimpse of the closest supernova astronomers have discovered in the last 25 years, would be cool yes ? All you need to do is get yourself a small telescope or a pair of binoculars (some DSLRs would do just fine as well). Astronomers think that they may have found the supernova within hours of its initial explosion on August 24. Generally, supernovas are around 1 billion light years away but this one is only 21 million light years away, so Han Solo and Millennium Falcon should do the trick as long as they don’t say “No Light Speed”. The supernova is in the Pinwheel Galaxy and you can see it within the Big Dipper."
Idle

Submission + - Hilarious 1930s Predictions of Wearable Technology (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: What did people from 1930s think we'd be wearing today—an electrical belt that adapts to climate changes, headlights to "find an honest man," jumpsuits with integrated telephones and radios? Find out what they got wrong, and sorta right.

Submission + - Judge orders former city worker Terry Childs to pa (sfexaminer.com)

0WaitState writes: "A judge Tuesday ordered a former city worker who locked San Francisco out of its main computer network for 12 days in 2008 to pay nearly $1.5 million in restitution, prosecutors said."

Keep in mind the network never went down and no user services were denied, and given that Terry Childs was the only one who had admin access (for years prior) it is difficult to understand how they came up in $1.5 million in costs, unless they're billing Terry Childs for the City's own failure to set up division of responsibility and standby emergency access procedures?

Earth

Yellowstone Supervolcano Larger Than First Thought 451

drewtheman writes "New studies of the plumbing that feeds the Yellowstone supervolcano in Wyoming's Yellowstone National Park shows the plume and the magma chamber under the volcano are larger than first thought and contradicts claims that only shallow hot rock exists. University of Utah research professor of geophysics Robert Smith led four separate studies that verify a plume of hot and molten rock at least 410 miles deep that rises at an angle from the northwest."
Security

America's 10 Most-Wanted Botnets 84

bednarz writes "Network World ranks America's 10 most wanted botnets, based on an estimate by security firm Damballa of botnet size and activity in the United States. The leader is Zeus, with 3.6 million compromised PCs so far. The Zeus Trojan uses key-logging techniques to steal user names, passwords, account numbers and credit card numbers, and it injects fake HTML forms into online banking login pages to steal user data. At the bottom of the list is Conficker, which despite its celebrity status has compromised just 210,000 US computers so far."
The Courts

Nesson & Camara Increase Attack Against RIAA 193

eldavojohn writes "We talked about Charlie Nesson of Harvard Law School before, and it may not have been known to you, but he is backing former student and Jammie Thomas' new lawyer, K.A.D. Camara. Ars is reporting that Nesson is upping the charges against the RIAA. Not only is file-sharing fair use, but the $100,000,000 the RIAA has collected through fear is due back to those wrongly accused. He's also increasing the number of fronts he's fighting. On Camara's website, he indicates that in another case, Brittany English (pro bono), they 'are asking the courts to declare that statutory damages like these — 150,000:1 — are unconstitutional and that the RIAA's campaign to extract settlements from individuals by the threat of such unconstitutional damages is itself unlawful, enjoin the RIAA's unlawful campaign, and order the RIAA to return the $100M+ that it obtained as a result of its unlawful campaign.'"

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