Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Submission Summary: 0 pending, 9 declined, 3 accepted (12 total, 25.00% accepted)

Google

Submission + - YouTube filtering is on-line (theage.com.au)

ghostcorps writes: The Age Reports:
"Online video leader YouTube rolled out long-awaited technology to automatically remove copyrighted clips, hoping to placate movie and television studios fed up with the website's persistent piracy problems. It's still too early to tell how YouTube's new filtering system will affect the seven-month-old Viacom suit, said Mike Fricklas, Viacom's general counsel. "We are delighted that Google appears to be stepping up to its responsibility and end the practice of infringement," he said. YouTube said it has been encouraged by early tests of its filtering system with nine content providers. Only two of the test participants, Walt Disney Co and Time Warner Inc, were willing to be identified."

Power

Submission + - Water from wind

ghostcorps writes: Columnist Phillip Adams writes about a new windmill design that literally extracts water from air. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867 ,21123007-12272,00.html


Usually a windmill has three blades facing into the wind. But Whisson's design has many blades, each as aerodynamic as an aircraft wing, and each employing "lift" to get the device spinning. I've watched them whirr into action in Whisson's wind tunnel at the most minimal settings. They start spinning long, long before a conventional windmill would begin to respond. I saw them come alive when a colleague opened an internal door.

And I forgot something. They don't face into the wind like a conventional windmill; they're arranged vertically, within an elegant column, and take the wind from any direction.

The secret of Max's design is how his windmills, whirring away in the merest hint of a wind, cool the air as it passes by. Like many a great idea, it couldn't be simpler — or more obvious. But nobody thought of it before.


With three or four of Max's magical machines on hills at our farm we could fill the tanks and troughs, and weather the drought. One small Whisson windmill on the roof of a suburban house could keep your taps flowing. Biggies on office buildings, whoppers on skyscrapers, could give independence from the city's water supply. And plonk a few hundred in marginal outback land — specifically to water tree-lots — and you could start to improve local rainfall.
The Courts

Submission + - Apple LTD not happy about iPhone Skins

ghostcorps writes: "Australian Newspaper 'The Age' reports that developers of iPhone skins, that is; skins for smartphones that resemble the iPhone, have been legally attacked by Apple LTD.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/mobiles — handhelds/a pple-crunches-websites-over-iphone-skins/2007/01/1 5/1168709656280.html

Apple's lawyers also sent letters to journalists who simply reported on the fact that the skins were available.

"It has come to our attention that you have posted a screenshot of Apple's new iPhone and links that facilitate the installation of that screenshot on a PocketPC device," law firm O'Melveny & Myers LLP wrote to Paul O'Brien, who runs the MoDaCo website.

"While we appreciate your interest in the iPhone, the icons and screenshot displayed on your website are copyrighted by Apple.

"Apple therefore demands that you remove this screenshot from your website and refrain from facilitating the further dissemination of Apple's copyrighted material by removing the link to http://forum.xda-developers.com/ where said icons and screenshot are being distributed."


  Kudos, to 'The Age' for posting the URL in the same paragraph that describes Apple's reaction to such reporting

  One would presume that a device that looks like an iPhone, but behaves like a smartphone is souring Apples latest offering."

Slashdot Top Deals

If you aren't rich you should always look useful. -- Louis-Ferdinand Celine

Working...