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Submission + - Test Pilot Chuck Yeager Dies at age 97 (npr.org)

jowifi writes: One of the world's most famous aviators has died: Chuck Yeager — best known as the first to break the sound barrier — has died at the age of 97.

After high school, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps where he didn't have the education credentials for flight training. But once the U.S. entered World War II a few months later, he got his chance.

Yeager became a fighter ace, shooting down five enemy aircraft in a single mission and four others on a different day. Then he faced another challenge during a dogfight over France. He got himself shot down and he escaped back to England.

Yeager broke the sound barrier on October 14, 1947 at Edwards Air Force Base in California. But there were no news broadcasts that day, no newspaper headlines. The aviation feat was kept secret for months.

Submission + - FBI unlocks iPhone without Apple's help in San Bernadino case (wsj.com)

A_Mang writes: After asking for a delay last week, today the FBI revealed that a third party has succeeded in unlocking the iPhone used by a shooter in the San Bernadino attack. They've asked the court to vacate their request for an injunction forcing Apple to provide tools for unlocking the phone.

Submission + - Electrical engineering lost 35,000 jobs last year (computerworld.com)

dcblogs writes: Despite an expanding use of electronics in products, the number of people working as electrical engineers in U.S. declined by 10.4% last year. The decline amounted to a loss of 35,000 jobs and increased the unemployment rate for electrical engineers from 3.4% in 2012 to 4.8% last year, an unusually high rate of job losses for this occupation. There are 300,000 people working as electrical engineers, according to U.S. Labor Department data analyzed by the IEEE-USA. In 2002, there were 385,000 electrical engineers in the U.S. Ron Hira, an assistant professor of public policy at the Rochester Institute of Technology, called the electrical engineering employment trend "truly disturbing," and said, "just like America's manufacturing has been hollowed out by offshoring and globalization, it appears that electrical and electronics engineering is heading that way."
Oracle

RIP, SunSolve 100

Kymermosst writes "Today marks the last day that SunSolve will be available. Oracle sent the final pre-deployment details today for the retirement of SunSolve and the transition to its replacement, My Oracle Support Release 5.2, which begins tomorrow. People who work with Sun's hardware and software have long used SunSolve as a central location for specifications, patches, and documentation."
Cellphones

Owners Smash iPhones To Get Upgrades, Says Insurance Company 406

markass530 writes "An iPhone insurance carrier says that four in six claims are suspicious, and is worse when a new model appears on the market. 'Supercover Insurance is alleging that many iPhone owners are deliberately smashing their devices and filing false claims in order to upgrade to the latest model. The gadget insurance company told Sky News Sunday that it saw a 50-percent rise in claims during the month Apple launched the latest version, the iPhone 3GS.'"
User Journal

Journal Journal: ASUS EEE $199 Laptop not in US

Word comes in that the once inexpensive laptop is now about the same price as a used one...

ASUS $199 Laptop. Now up to $399, and the cheaper model will not be available

Is it just me, or did the hope of an inexpensive laptop go out the window? Don't get me wrong, I know $299 and $399 is cheaper then usual, but for that price, I could buy a full fledged used laptop, with 25 GBs of HDD space...

Feed Sony's PSP price cut coming to Europe on May 4th (engadget.com)

Filed under: Gaming, Handhelds

C'mon, you did think that Sony whippersnapper that confirmed the US PSP price cut was holding back about Europe, didn't you? As these things tend to fall, Europe is getting similar treatment as the US (albeit in a slightly later fashion), as the price of the PlayStation Portable will soon be descending to £130 / €170 (between $231 and $260) across the lake. Additionally, several Platinum titles will be taking a nosedive right along with it, as Ridge Racer 2, Tekken, Killzone, LocoRoco, and Moto GP all sink to £14.99 ($30). Hold your horses before skipping out of work and ripping our your credit card, though, as the price drops aren't slated to take effect until May 4th -- but we'd still recommend keeping a close eye out, as we know all too well how those street dates can fall through hold up.

[Via Joystiq]

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!


Feed Stretching DNA To The Limit (sciencedaily.com)

A group of researchers at Duke University have developed a method to measure changes in the mechanical properties of DNA upon irradiation with UV light. This work might pave the way for using stretch-release force spectroscopy measurements in DNA diagnostics.

Feed Towards Rational Vaccine Design (sciencedaily.com)

The immune system recognizes vaccine agents as foreign, destroys them, and "remembers" them. When the virulent version of an agent comes along, the immune system is thus prepared to respond. This long term immunity relies heavily upon the generation of so called B cells, which will generate antibodies that will bind to pathogens and mark them for destruction. A recent study describes strategies for vaccine design, specifically selective priming of B cells using various adjuvants.

Comment A Real-World Example (Score 1) 454

I have a good example of the throughput differences between SCSI and IDE. I have a SCSI DVD-ROM player. I can play a DVD full-screen (using a Hollywood decoder card) using 10-20% of my CPU (P2-350, 128M RAM). My friend has the same drive (and decoder) but the IDE version (the Pioneer 6X slot drive) on a Celeron 450. He ended up buying the SCSI version later because he could not watch DVDs full screen.

So the IDE adage is basically true: IDE IS AS FAST AS SCSI FOR 1 DEVICE. However, CD-ROMS/CD-Rs/etc count too.

Just FYI, I have a 9G U2W IBM disk, a CD-R, a DVD, and a Jaz all hanging off of a Adaptec U2W controller, and the system handles heavy IO very smoothly. That's the only excuse I need to spend a little extra for SCSI.

- Robert

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