Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Media

Submission + - MythTV 0.22 Released

uyguremre writes: After a little over a year and a half in the making, the developers of MythTV announced that MythTV 0.22 is now available. There have been a lot of large changes since 0.21, including a port from Qt v3 to Qt v4 and a major UI rewrite to convert to MythTV's new MythUI user interface libary.
As always, this release adds support for some new hardware, in this case VDPAU video acceleration, DVB-S2, and the Hauppauge HD-PVR. The MythUI toolkit allows themes much greater control over the user interface and today we're announcing a competition to design new themes for MythTV. With the new release comes a theming competition too.
For a more complete list of changes and new features, read the Release Notes on the wiki.

Feed YouTube to collect user data (com.com)

Blog: YouTube, the Internet's No.1 video warehouse, is gearing up to collect user data that could prove valuable to marketers, according...
User Journal

Journal SPAM: History Of Bible Translation

Septuagint was written in 285 -246 BC, this is a Koine Greek translation of the Old Testament.

Vulgate was written in 382 -405 by Jerome, this is a Latin translation of Bible.

First English translation was done by Wycliffe in 1384.

After a partial attempt by Tyndale, King James Version was published in 1611. This is a work by 47 scholars. -Paraphrase Rate 2%

Following list is a modern translation.

American Standard Version 1901 -Paraphrase Rate 3%

Privacy

Submission + - US Feds expose thousands of SSNs

msblack writes: The New York Times is reporting that an Office of Management and Budget exposed over 30,000 SSNs on its website which now notes that information has been removed. As many as 100,000 to 150,000 individuals may have been affected. Taxpayer cost for notifications and credit monitoring is $4 million.
Hardware Hacking

Submission + - How to spy on monitors through walls

An anonymous reader writes: Using radio to eavesdrop on CRTs has been around since the 80s, but Cambridge University researchers have shown laptops and flat-panel displays are vulnerable too. Using basic radio equipment and an FPGA board totalling less than $2,000 you it was possible to read text from a laptop three offices away. This is certainly cool, but is this a security issue we should worry about?

Slashdot Top Deals

Let's organize this thing and take all the fun out of it.

Working...