Submission + - Google Bans Sale Of Android Spying App (dbune.com)
Comment Not more "safety features" please (Score 2, Insightful) 157
Rather than replacing drivers it is hoped that the technology will be used to study ways to complement drivers' abilities
That's become the problem with ABS, traction control, airbags and many other safety features: make drivers feel like they're safer, they will drive more like idiots. I'd far rather this system was developed to replace drivers; granted it will take more work to make it completely reliable, but it would mean fewer people thinking that because they've got the latest safety systems in their car they don't have to pay as much attention to their driving.
Submission + - CRTC to Allow Usage Based Billing (www.cbc.ca)
Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Induction cooktop fun
Submission + - Stopping Malaria By Immunizing Bugs (ibtimes.com)
But at Johns Hopkins University, Rhoel Dinglasan, an entomologist and biologist, decided to try another tack: immunizing mosquitoes.
When a mosquito bites an infected human, it takes up some of the gametocytes.They aren't dangerous to people at that stage. Since plasmodium is vulnerable there, and that is the point that Dinglasan chose to attack.
A mosquito's gut has certain receptor molecules in it that the plasmodium can bind to. Dinglasan asked what would happen if the parasite couldn't "see" them, which would happen if another molecule, some antigen, were binding to those receptors.
Comment Interesting marketing idea... (Score 1) 1
a) someone, somewhere in the entirety of film history has made a hand gesture that we might interpret nowadays as "a bit like holding a mobile phone".
b) this hand gesture appears on a couple of seconds of film. Two and a half minutes is a lot of Youtube single-shot watching time just to see the bit the conspiracy theorists are going to get all moist about.
Submission + - Wireless HDMI at 1080p, Lag-Free WHDI Tested (hothardware.com) 1
Submission + - New Critical Flash Bug Being Exploited (threatpost.com)
The new Flash bug came to light early Thursday when a researcher posted information about the problem, as well as a Trojan that is exploiting it and dropping a pair of malicious files on vulnerable PCs. Researcher Mila Parkour tested the bug and posted a screenshot of the malicious files that a Trojan exploiting the vulnerability drops during its infection routine. Adobe has since confirmed the vulnerability and said that it is aware of the attacks against Reader.
Submission + - Oracle: Google 'Directly Copied' Our Java Code (itworld.com) 1
Comment Re:...or just watch Mythbusters (Score 1) 303
(if the show isn't a trick...) - or just doesn't credit all the research it does.
Comment Re:Misleading Title (Score 1) 303
d'oh... remember to insert link... Mythbusters on Youtube
Comment Re:Misleading Title (Score 1) 303
At the risk of "look, they did it on TV so it must be true", Mythbusters made it look very straightforward...Link to Youtube
Submission + - The great iPhone serial port hack (computerworld.com.au)
Comment Re:Oh, it's Australia (Score 4, Informative) 201
...except people in Australia rarely drink Foster's itself. It's vile. More usually VB or Tooheys, but it's a pretty regional-preference thing.