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Comment CS is like automobile tech in the '60s (Score 1) 36

A lot of kids will learn about it on their own, but many won't, so a little bit of high school CS training makes sense, so kids at least understand what an operating system is/does, and the same for databases, compilers, HTTP, etc. Not enough so that they could get a job doing it, but just so they've been exposed to concepts and can talk about it in layman's terms.

Submission + - Scientists Find Life in "Mars-Like" Chilean Desert (wsu.edu)

An anonymous reader writes: In 1938, CBS radio aired Orson Welles' dramatization of H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds ; the broadcast was livened up by periodic "news bulletins" reporting strange activity on Mars and in New Jersey. There may or may have not been men on Mars at the time, and later opinions also differ on whether the broadcast caused widespread panic across the USA. Eighty years later, scientists are again claiming to have found evidence on earth of Martian life. Well, not exactly Martian life...

For the first time, researchers have seen life rebounding in the world's driest desert, demonstrating that it could also be lurking in the soils of Mars. Led by Washington State University planetary scientist Dirk Schulze-Makuch, an international team studied the driest corner of South America's Atacama Desert, where decades pass without any rain. Scientists have long wondered whether microbes in the soil of this hyperarid environment, the most similar place on Earth to the Martian surface, are permanent residents or merely dying vestiges of life, blown in by the weather.

Billions of years ago, Mars had small oceans and lakes where early lifeforms may have thrived. As the planet dried up and grew colder, these organisms could have evolved many of the adaptations lifeforms in the Atacama soil use to survive on Earth, Schulze-Makuch said. "We know there is water frozen in the Martian soil and recent research strongly suggests nightly snowfalls and other increased moisture events near the surface," he said. "If life ever evolved on Mars, our research suggests it could have found a subsurface niche beneath today's severely hyper-arid surface."


Submission + - Burger King Conquers Internet with "Fast Food Neutrality Repeal" Ad (latimes.com)

An anonymous reader writes: By now you've probably seen Burger King's spoof ad on the decision by the US Federal Communications Commision to repeal net neutrality. In the ad, BK customers are informed that there are now three "lanes" for ordering Whoopers, each with substantially different prices and waiting times. The ad has already generated over a million views on Youtube and is lighting up Twitter. One thing I missed the first time is that while the BK "counter help" are clearly in on the act, the customers are apparently real; they learn of the cockamamie scheme at the counter, in the style of the old TV show Candid Camera.

Submission + - White House Petition to Confer National Landmark Status to Flickr API

somekind writes: Over the past few months Twitter imposed restrictions on the use of its client API, and Facebook shut down the facial recognition API supported the face.com after acquiring the company. Mathew Ingram noted these and other examples (Google starting to charge for high-volume use of Google Maps) as evidence that "open APIs" published by a single vendor can't be trusted by outside developers. Worried about the possibility that Yahoo! might do the same with Flickr, Dave Winer has just launched a petition to Obama asking the President to declare the Flickr API a National Historic Landmark, thus (by Dave's reckoning) legally protected from arbitrary withdrawal or wholesale changes by its corporate masters. As of this post, Dave's petition has gained 24 signees.

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Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (4) How many times do we have to tell you, "No prior art!"

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