Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Biotech

Aussie Government Offers $40M To Build a Bionic Eye 89

An anonymous reader writes "The Australian Government is keen to replicate the success of the Cochlear Implant (bionic ear) by throwing AU$50M (US$40M) of funding at the development of a bionic eye. Bionic eyes have been trialed with some success in the UK — with recipients able to detect senses of shape and space, but very little detail."

Comment Re:Molecular weight (Score 1) 164

But even with a large scale operation you arent creating that much LSD. If you are staying somewhere around 1g = 10,000 doses at 100ug, and even a huge operation doing millions of dosages...I highly doubt very much is evaporating or spilling.

Add to the fact it is then highly dilute in liquid and very stable on blotter...I dont buy this a bit.

Comment Re:Less than a billionth of a gram per cubic meter (Score 1) 164

Getting positives for pot smoke in the air I can see being reasonable. Cocaine, opiates, perscriptions or other drug traces in sewage water...maybe...

But LSD in the AIR? No damn way what so ever.

How do you even detect such a minute amount to begin with? What is the actual process? (Serious there)

Unless this is replicated there must be some contamination.

Comment Re:Simple Solution (Score 0) 500

You are on slashdot man...ok, yes there are a few starving college students in CS/CE programs surviving on Ramen but for the most part the demo is mid20s+ and we can affort $10/meal and not just $3. (yes i see our 5 dig uid and bow you your inability to lose email passwords)

Yes, yes, soup in a bowl made of bread is quite up scale I understand this.

But when Olive Garden is pricey you have some some shit wrong.
Security

A Closer Look At Chromium and Browser Security 109

GhostX9 writes "Tom's Hardware's continuing series on computing security has an interview with Adam Barth and Collin Jackson, members of Stanford University's Web Security Group and members of the team that developed Chromium, the open-source core behind Google Chrome. The interview goes into detail regarding the sandboxing approach unique to Chromium, comparisons between the browser and its competition, and web security in general."
Math

Can Fractals Make Sense of the Quantum World? 236

Keith found a New Scientist story about fractals and quantum theory. The article says "Take the mathematics of fractals into account, says Palmer, and the long-standing puzzles of quantum theory may be much easier to understand. They might even dissolve away."
Television

ABC/Disney Considering Hulu 192

An anonymous reader writes "The Walt Disney Co and Hulu.com have restarted talks over offering shows from Disney's ABC television network on the online video distributor owned by NBC Universal and News Corp, paidContent.org reported on Friday, citing unnamed sources." The real question to me is when will they stop screwing around with Boxee users?
Operating Systems

Fastbooting Linux For Dummies? 241

Linux First timer writes "I wonder whether the Linux Gurus of Slashdot could help me with some advice on setting up a Linux system for my wife. She is not at all computer literate, but likes to get on the net for a few minutes every morning to read news etc. She is always bitching that our XP desktop takes way too long to boot 'just to get on the net for a few minutes.' I was thinking that I could take an old laptop we have, do a little first time test drive installing and using Linux, and possibly solve her problem in one go. The requirements for the system are simple: fast as possible boot/load Firefox, easy for a computer dummy to get onto the net, hard to break through random incompetence, and comes with Open Office.org or similar for occasional use. Wouldn't be used for much else. Any useful advice for us two poor Linux newbies? For example, is Ubuntu the best choice for this, or is there a better Linux flavour for the purpose? Any useful tweaks a novice can handle to make it work better for these simple tasks only?"
Patents

Copyright and Patent Laws Hurt the Economy 597

Norsefire writes "Two economists at Washington University in St. Louis are claiming that copyright and patent laws are 'killing innovation' and 'hurting [the] economy.' Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine state they would like to see copyright law abolished completely as there are other protections available to the creators of 'intellectual property' (a term they describe as 'propaganda,' and of recent origin). They are calling on Congress to grant patents only where an invention has social value, where the patent would not stifle innovation, and where the absence of a patent would damage cost-effectiveness."

Comment Re:Poor reasons (Score 1) 576

Its more concenient because you dont need a "DivX DVD player with a USB port" or "MythTV and Media PCs." Download, watch. That is why its so convenient for people to watch content on their computer. Add to that that people spend a ton of time in front of a computer anyway, and It is just as easy.

My 23" from 3ft away is about as good as my 47" from 10ft away. Feel free to break out a Resolution/Distance chart and prove me wrong. =)

Torrents and Netflix helped to kill TV, not facebook Id have to add.
Hardware Hacking

A Sony Camera Running Linux 209

jonr writes "At the recently concluded Consumer Electronics Show, Sony presented the new camera from its Cyber-shot product line. The DSC-G3 comes with a Zeiss lens with 4x zoom, a large 3.5" touch display, and 4GB of internal memory. Most interesting is the camera's software that includes, among other things, face and scene recognition, based on Busybox and Kernel 2.6.11 for the Access Linux Platform. The camera also has built-in Wi-Fi."
Input Devices

TrueMotion Game Controller a Step Up From Wii Remote 187

Harry McCracken writes "One of my top picks at the Consumer Electronics Show was Sixense's TrueMotion, a game-controller technology that resembles the Wii's remote, but uses an electromagnetic field to provide far more precision — it knows the exact location of the controller in 3D space and which way you're pointing it. (The Wiimote only knows which direction you're moving the controller.) TrueMotion-based remotes are due by Christmas, bundled with a PC game for under $100."

Slashdot Top Deals

BLISS is ignorance.

Working...