Jan 24 2009

The 3 biggest fears about Starcraft 2 and why not to worry

The original masterpiece that is Starcraft is still played 10 years later to this day among tens of thousands of players, and with that, comes skepticism that Starcraft 2 won’t be able to match the greatness. Innovation, price, and multiple-building selection top the list of worries, but here are reasons why you should keep the faith in Blizzard.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Colleges turn french fry oil into fuel

Students have begun making bio diesel fuel by converting used cooking oil from the dining hall.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Harley-Davidson to Cut 1,000+ Jobs

Harley-Davidson Inc. has announced it will close its Wauwatosa, Wis., plant in 2010, eliminating several hundred jobs.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Obama’s STFU Look

Leave it to Jon Stewart to provide funny and informative information to us. Learn what Obama’s STFU look is.

Share

Jan 24 2009

"Hobbits" Were Separate Species, Skull Suggests

The skull of the so-called hobbit discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2003 suggests its owner was an archaic human ancestor, not a diminutive or diseased modern human, according to a new study.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Downadup Worm — When Will the Next Shoe Drop?

alphadogg writes “The Downadup worm — also called Conflicker — has now infected an estimated 10 million PCs worldwide, and security experts say they expect to see a dangerous second-stage payload dropped soon. ‘It has the potential to infect about 30% of Windows systems online, a potential 300 to 350 million PCs,’ says Don Jackson, director of threat intelligence in the counter threat unit at SecureWorks. The worm, first identified in November and suspected to have originated in the Ukraine, is quickly ramping up, and while Downadup today is not malicious in the sense of destroying files — its main trick is to block users from accessing antivirus sites to obtain updates to protect against it — the worm is capable of downloading second-stage code for darker purposes.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Long-Term PC Preservation Project?

failcomm writes “I’ve been talking with my son’s (middle-school) computer lab teacher about a ‘time capsule’ project. The school has a number of ‘retirement age’ PCs (5-6 years old — Dells, HPs, a couple of Compaqs), and we’ve been kicking around the idea of trying to preserve a working system and some media (CDs and/or DVDs), and locking them away to be preserved for some period of time (say 50 years); to be opened by students of the future. The goal would be to have instructions on how to unpack the system, plug it into the wall (we’ll assume everyone is still using 110v US outlets), and get the system to boot. Also provide instructions on how to load the media and see it in action; whether it is photos or video or games or even student programs — whatever. So first, is this idea crazy? Second, how would we go about packing/preserving various components? Lastly, any suggestions on how to store it long term? (Remember, this is a school project, so we can’t exactly just ‘freeze it in carbonite’; practical advice would be appreciated.)”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Mozilla Labs Wants To Monitor (Volunteers’) Firefox Use

Howardd21 writes “PC World reports that Mozilla Labs wants 1% of its Firefox users to voluntarily provide information about how they use the browser, and their web browsing habits. This would be done through an add-on named “Test Pilot” that collects the information and associates it with some demographic information that the user has provided. Unlike other data collection utilities that software developers may include to provide usage information, the add-on will follow the same open source concept that Firefox adheres to, allowing the market to better understand what is being collected. Mozilla Labs stresses privacy when discussing how they will collect, store and use the data, including publishing it for other researchers to to analyze.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Linus Switches From KDE to Gnome

An anonymous reader writes “In a recent Computerworld interview, Linus revealed that he’s switched to Gnome — this despite launching a heavily critical broadside against Gnome just a few years ago. His reason? He thinks KDE 4 is a ‘disaster.’ Although it’s improved recently, he’ll find many who agree with this prognosis, and KDE 4 can be painful to use.” There’s quite a bit of interesting stuff in this interview, besides, regarding the current state of Linux development.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Jan 24 2009

Microsoft ‘Vista Capable’ Settlement Cost Could Be Over $8 Billion

bk- writes with news that documents from the “Vista Capable” class-action lawsuit against Microsoft indicate the software giant could be on the hook for as much as .52 billion in upgrade costs. “[University of Washington economist Keith] Leffler came up with his total upgrade costs by calculating how much it would cost to upgrade each of the 19.4 million PCs with 1 GB of memory and graphics cards or onboard chipsets able to run Aero, according to Keizer. Leffler put the maximum cost of upgrading the desktops at 5, while positing that the notebooks’ integrated graphics would be more tricky to replace and would cost between 5 and 0 per unit. The total price tag for Microsoft would thus range from .92 billion to .52 billion and in some cases would include complete replacements of notebooks that could not be feasibly upgraded, Leffler testified. Microsoft in its response argued that giving litigants ‘a free upgrade to Premium-ready PCs would provide a windfall to millions.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share