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Submission + - Humans evolving 100 times faster than ever (reuters.com)

John Hawks writes: "A new genomics study in PNAS shows that humans have been evolving new adaptive genes during the past 10,000 years much faster than ever before. The study says that evolution has sped up because of population growth, making people adapt faster to new diseases, new diets, and social changes like cities. Oh, and I'm the lead author. I've been reading Slashdot for a long time, and let me just say that our study doesn't necessarily apply to trolls."
Books

Submission + - The Home Library Problem Solved (blogspot.com) 1

Zack Grossbart writes: "About 18 months ago I posted the following question to Ask SlashDot, "How do you organize a home library with 3,500 books?" I have read all the responses, reviewed most of the available software, and come up with a good solution described in the article The Library Problem. This article discusses various cataloging schemes, reviews cheap barcode scanners, and outlines a complete solution for organizing your home library. Now you can see an Ask SlashDot question with a definitive answer."
NASA

Submission + - NASA snaps mysterious 'Night-Shining' clouds (networkworld.com)

coondoggie writes: "NASA said today its AIM satellite has provided the first global-scale, full-season view of iridescent polar clouds that form 50 miles above Earth's surface known as "Night-Shining" clouds. Night Shining clouds form at a high altitude which lets them reflect sunlight long after the sun has set. According to NASA, little is known about these clouds at the edge of space, also called Polar Mesospheric Clouds. The clouds consist of ice crystals formed when water vapor condenses onto dust particles in these coldest regions of the planet, at temperatures that may dip to minus 210 to minus 235 degrees F. http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/22856"
Mars

Submission + - How To Beat Congress's Ban Of Humans On Mars 2

An anonymous reader writes: Earlier this year, the House of Representatives passed a bill that would ban humans on Mars at NASA: "Provided, That none of the funds under this heading shall be used for any research, development, or demonstration activities related exclusively to the human exploration of Mars." The bill is held up in Congress and the anti-Mars language may be taken out. But in case the Mars ban becomes law, the Space Review has a handy guide on how NASA can beat the ban and continue its research and development without breaking the law.
Music

Submission + - Drop the DRM - UK retailers beg recording industry (blorge.com)

thefickler writes: Consumers aren't the only ones carrying "Death to DRM" placards. UK music retailers are telling the recording industry enough is enough — that the industry's obsession with copy protection is hurting, not helping profit. Kim Bayley, director-general of the Entertainment Retailers Association (ERA) said that the anti-piracy technologies are not protecting industry revenue but instead "stifling growth and working against the consumer interest".

Feed Techdirt: Companies Have A Blind Spot To Their Biggest Competitive Threats (techdirt.com)

Years ago, I took a class on IPOs, where the professor (a Wall Street lawyer) said that if you ever actually read and believed the "risk factors" in a company's SEC filings, you'd never bother to invest. They're supposed to be the the absolute worst case scenarios, laid clean, so that any investor can't claim they were blindsided should everything go wrong. In fact, companies are often pushed to make the risk factors seem as scary as possible to avoid the possibility of a later lawsuit. However, as scary as you make them, that still doesn't mean that companies are doing a very good job figuring out what risks are really on the way. Joe Weisenthal does a nice job looking through a bunch of historical financial filings from companies as their market cap peaked to see if they accurately noted the biggest challenges to their business -- and found that they often do not note even the most obvious (in retrospect) challenges. For example, the big newspaper chain McClatchy claimed that the biggest threat to its business in 2005 was the cost of newsprint, barely noting the impact of the internet on any newspaper's core business plan. And that's in 2005 -- not 1995, when it first should have been occurring to folks at newspapers that the internet represented both a threat and an opportunity. He also checked out Microsoft's filings, noting that the company has been incredibly slow to recognize that Google was a competitor in its risk factors listings.

Of course, this raises some interesting questions. Are these companies really missing these threats? Do they start out so small and grow so fast that companies really are taken by surprise? Is it only in hindsight that it seemed obvious? Or is it that the companies don't want to admit these emerging offerings are really threats until they absolutely have to? And... if that's the case, who are they trying to deny the threat to? Themselves? Or their investors? It may be a little of all of that -- but it stands to reason that the denial runs across the board -- and part of it may simply be that companies don't want to admit that these "upstarts" are threats because it could actually serve to legitimize the threat and even accelerate it. Either way, it should make you question just how useful the "risk factors" really are. Even when they're designed to be as conservative as possible, they may actually be used to hide the real threat. Perhaps we need a more open sourced/Wikimedia approach to risk factors. I'd bet that in 2005, if you asked a bunch of knowledgeable folks about McClatchy's risk factors, they'd have named the internet ahead of newsprint costs.

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Feed Science Daily: Key Nerve Navigation Pathway Identified (sciencedaily.com)

Newly-launched nerve cells in a growing embryo must chart their course to distant destinations, and many of the means they use to navigate have yet to surface. Scientists have recovered a key signal that guides motor neurons -- the nascent cells that extend from the spinal cord and must find their way down the length of limbs such as arms, wings and legs.

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