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Space

Submission + - NASA Phoenix Mission Ready For Mars Landing (physorg.com) 1

esocid writes: NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander is preparing to end its long journey and begin a three-month mission to taste and sniff fistfuls of Martian soil and buried ice. The lander is scheduled to touch down on the Red Planet May 25. Phoenix will enter the top of the Martian atmosphere at almost 21,000 kilometers per hour (almost 13,000 mph). In seven minutes, the spacecraft must complete a challenging sequence of events to slow to about 8 kilometers per hour (5 mph) before its three legs reach the ground. Confirmation of the landing could come as early as 7:53 p.m. EDT. "This is not a trip to grandma's house. Putting a spacecraft safely on Mars is hard and risky," said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. "Internationally, fewer than half the attempts have succeeded."
One research goal is to assess whether conditions at the site ever have been favorable for microbial life. The composition and texture of soil above the ice could give clues to whether the ice ever melts in response to long-term climate cycles. Another important question is whether the scooped-up samples contain carbon-based chemicals that are potential building blocks and food for life.

Feed Wired: Vote: The Best of the DIY Web (feedburner.com)

Wired isn't the only site providing resources of the hands-on variety. The web has always been well-steeped in DIY culture, and there are thousands of pages dedicated to projects, tutorial topics and helpful tips for using software and hardware of all stripes. That's why we're asking you to nominate the best "how to" projects on the web. What are the destinations that really inspire you to roll up your sleeves, grease your elbows and get your hands dirty? Tell us -- we'll feature the winning tutorial on the front page of the Wired How To Wiki and give the author a special prize.


The Internet

Submission + - The IT industry's Red Shift Theory

Stony Stevenson writes: Sun Microsystems' CTO, Greg Papadopoulos has come out with a Red Shift Theory for IT which posits that an elite group of companies are consuming inordinate amounts of IT infrastructure, well beyond most other businesses, and that their demand is growing exponentially. This trend, Papadopoulos maintains, has implications not just for IT's most insatiable consumers, but for the structure of the computing industry itself. It's not just about how many CPU cycles a company uses. Papadopoulos argues that red-shift companies will enjoy exponential business growth in the coming years. Blue-shift companies — those whose processing needs aren't exploding — will grow at about the same rate as GDP, he says.

He uses red shift to describe the rapidly expanding universe of computing demand as data processing requirements — not only from Web companies like Google, YouTube, MySpace, and Salesforce.com, but also from large conventional users of high-performance computing like pharmaceutical, financial, and energy companies — exceed the ability of Moore's Law to keep up.

This in depth article takes a look at what Papadopoulos's theory is about and its impact on the wider IT community.

Feed Science Daily: Brains Learn Better At Night (sciencedaily.com)

If you think that the idea of a morning person or an evening person is nonsense, then a postgraduate student has news for you. The young researchers have found that the time of day influences your brain's ability to learn--and the human brain learns more effectively in the evening. And by identifying at what point in the day the brain is best able to operate, rehabilitation therapy can be targeted to that time, when recovery is maximised.
Privacy

Journal SPAM: FBI Raids Home of Suspected NSA Leaker 608

During the very time Congress was debating codifying the Bush administration's wiretap lawbreaking by revising the FISA law the Gonzales DOJ was raiding the home of a former Justice official to identify the person who first brought the illicit program to light.

As Newsweek details the FBI raided the home of Thomas M. Tamm, former official of the Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR) within DOJ.

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