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US Officials Flunk Test On Civic Knowledge 334

A test on civic knowledge given to elected officials proved that they are slightly less knowledgeable than the uninformed people who voted them into office. Elected officials scored a 44 percent while ordinary citizens managed an amazing 49 percent on the 33 questions compiled by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute. "It is disturbing enough that the general public failed ISI's civic literacy test, but when you consider the even more dismal scores of elected officials, you have to be concerned," said Josiah Bunting, chairman of the National Civic Literacy Board at ISI. The three branches of government aren't the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria?
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Bottom of the Barrel Book Reviews — The Lost Blogs 235

We get a lot of books for review here at Slashdot. Most are sent out to users on our reviewer list within a few weeks. Others become part of an impressive wall of books on my desk before they find a home. There are a choice few however that are doomed to never see the inside of a Fedex box. This is mostly due to the complete and utter stupidity or absurdness of their subject matter. I've decided to give these failed intellectual endeavors a chance and explore just how big a waste of time a book can be. We start scraping the bottom of the barrel with a little number written by Paul Davidson called, The Lost Blogs. Read below to find out just how bad it got.

3D Weather Data Visualization in Second Life 62

An anonymous reader noted that the Second Life media blitz continues by saying that "The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) with Aimee Weber Studio just unrolled a sneak preview of their educational project in Second Life (due to open in mid November). This appetizer of things to come features the three dimensional visualization of live weather (now on display at the Science Center)." Don't go there expecting that they have like every doppler radar in the US updating in realtime or anything, but it's actually a practical real use for Second Life.

Comment Re:Here's a question... (Score 1) 151

It is yellow. The reason for this are indeed the frequencies of light. Although the photoresist used on wafers under process during the litho steps is most sensitive to a certain wavelenght (193 nm for 90 nm feature size, see wikipedia on litho), unindented exposure most be avoided at all costs.

Working under normal light would ruin any wafer with photoresist. Working in total dark would be ideal, but yellow is supposed to be some good compromise between working conditions and process issues.

Allthough the litho part of chip manufactering happens under the yellow light, other parts of a cleanroom normally have normal lightning.

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