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Comment Raising dissidents? snakes? (Score 1) 97

If country A imports what country B calls "terrorists" (or dissidents) and worships free speech about all else, and does nothing when many official requests are received to "do something" about acts against the sovereignty of country B, then country B takes action to do something about it (because country A won't), then country A can "predict" country B of spying/hacking all it wants.

Comment Not a failure (Score 5, Interesting) 35

It is too harsh to call it a failure. After watching many hours of video footage, I would judge it most certainly NOT a failure, but a good first step. Yes, many robots fell down. Yes, it would be nice to make a requirement for them to get up -- and at least one did in the *competition*, if i recall correctly. The tiny robot an Asian student was *demonstrating* (he didn't speak much English) got up amazingly fast since he designed it in.

It is understandable that DARPA reduced the difficulty in this first baby step of the competition. What would you rather have, (a) very difficult tasks so that no team can complete all tasks, or (b) difficult enough so not *all* teams can complete all tasks, but some can? I'd choose (b) every time, since it results in encouragement to take the next step in the development. There are many other benefits if you think about it for a minute or two.

Displays

"Minority Report"-Like Control For PC 138

An anonymous reader writes "A startup named Mgestyk Technologies claims that they have an affordable solution for 'Minority Report'-like PC control. They have released a video in which they use hand gestures to play games like Halo and Guitar Hero, as well as perform 'multi-touch' interactions for applications like Google Earth. Engadget and Gizmodo discuss the potential of the technology but point out that the system has visible lag when used for gaming. Will camera-based interfaces ever meet the low-latency demands of gaming? For how much longer will we still be using keyboards, mice and joysticks?"

Comment Re:Dear Slashdot... (Score 1) 346

Give the guy a break. He's not talking *for* DARPA since he's a consultant, and is asking for ideas that he might miss by doing traditional searching - which is a completely valid point, especially in the leading edge fields DARPA deals with. I have come across, more than once, work of significance at unexpected places - even though it was before the Internet because very popular. There may still be isolated instances of interesting and useful work done - the isolation being unintentional, intentional or strong or weak.

Security

New "Mebroot" MBR-Modifying Rootkit Analyzed 65

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "F-Secure has a writeup on a highly obfuscated, advanced new rootkit they recently discovered which uses a number of old techniques like MBR modification in new ways. It modifies the MBR, starts up its downloader with an ntoskrnl.exe hook set to nt!Phase1Initialization (which conveniently removes it from memory afterwards), and hooks IRP_MJ_READ and IRP_MJ_WRITE in disk.sys to hide itself in empty sectors. It also bypasses software firewalls by calling the NDIS API directly, using a 'code pullout' technique to load just the parts of ndis.sys that it needs. F-Secure believes it was written by professionals who are after financial information."

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"This generation may be the one that will face Armageddon." -- Ronald Reagan, "People" magazine, December 26, 1985

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