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Power

NRDC Rates Energy Efficiency of Video Game Consoles 260

An anonymous reader writes "Today, more than 40 percent of all homes in the United States contain at least one video game console. Recognizing that all that gaming could add up to serious demand for electricity, NRDC and Ecos Consulting performed the first ever comprehensive study on the energy use of video game consoles and found that they consumed an estimated 16 billion kilowatt-hours per year — roughly equal to the annual electricity use of the city of San Diego. Through the incorporation of more user-friendly power management features, we could save approximately 11 billion kWh of electricity per year, cut our nation's electricity bill by more than $1 billion per year, and avoid emissions of more than 7 million tons of CO2 each year. In this November 2008 issue paper, NRDC provides recommendations for users, video game console manufacturers, component suppliers and the software companies that design games for improving the efficiency of video game consoles already in homes as well as future generations of machines yet to hit the shelves." The full report is freely downloadable as a PDF.
Education

Stanford To Offer Free CS and Robotics Courses 247

DeviceGuru writes "Stanford University will soon begin offering a series of 10 free, online computer science and electrical engineering courses. Initial courses will provide an introduction to computer science and an introduction to field of robotics, among other topics. The courses, offered under the auspices of Stanford Engineering Everywhere (SEE), are nearly identical to standard courses offered to registered Stanford students and will comprise downloadable video lectures, handouts, assignments, exams, and transcripts. And get this: all the courses' materials are being released under the Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license."

Comment Summary: Used Both, Prefer JSP (Score 2) 32

I lurk here a lot but never post anything so here's my FIRST POST. I have used both technologies (ASP and JSP) on several different projects and enthusiastically recommend JSP over ASP. So far in all the different methods I've used to develop web apps (C++-CGI, C++ISAPI, JSP, ASP) I feel JSP just from a language stand point is a better choice over JSP. The limitations of the VBScript language is something I felt like I was constantly fighting -- the VBSript language is just too limited when compared to the power Java gives you. The concept behind both technologies are the same: embeded Java or VBScript within the HTML. As far as I know the ASP will be interpreted each time it is processed. JSP's will get turned into a java code (as a servlet) that will stay in memory until a change occurs, at which time it will be processed and compiled again. Also with a good JIT virtual machine I think performance of JSP is better than ASP. I don't have any benchmarks but based on my experience JSP pages "feel" faster. Hope this helps.

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