Jan 24 2009

Sylvester Stallone at 62 (PIC)

Stallone has definitely been hitting the gym hard. Maybe a little too hard. Shouldn’t he be getting discount movie tickets and early bird dinners?

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Jan 24 2009

Small earthquake rattles western Los Angeles 01/23/2009 7:42

The U.S. Geological Survey said the 3.4-magnitude quake hit at 7:42 p.m. near the Venice boardwalk, a popular recreation spot for tourists and residents

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Jan 24 2009

8 Oddball Twitter Utilities

I’ve dug through countless services to find some interesting, loopy, and just plain cool tools that allow you to do more than talk to friends. From receiving tweets when your clothes are clean to tracking packages, Twitter is a great place to solve many of the day’s tasks.

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Jan 24 2009

14,000 suffer vegetable-related injuries

Are health and safety rules over the top? Perhaps not, judging by the bizarre accidents we have in our own homes, frequently involving vegetables. And they don’t all include using them as sex aids!

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Jan 24 2009

Want to Play with My Shiny New Toy?

Weeeee!

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Jan 24 2009

BotPrize — A Turing Test For Bots

Philip Hingston writes “Computers can’t play like people — yet. An unusual kind of computer game bot-programming contest has just been held in Perth, Australia, as part of the IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence and Games. The contest was not about programming the bot that plays the best. The aim was to see if a bot could convince another player that it was actually a human player. Game Development Studio 2K Australia (creator of BioShock) provided ,000 cash plus a trip to their studio in Canberra for anyone who could create a bot to pass this ‘Turing Test for Bots.’ People like to play against opponents who are like themselves — opponents with personality, who can surprise, who sometimes make mistakes, yet don’t robotically make the same mistakes over and over. Computers are superbly fast and accurate at playing games, but can they be programmed to be more fun to play — to play like you and me?” Read on for the rest of Philip’s thoughts.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Jan 24 2009

Comcast’s Congestion Catch-22

An anonymous reader sends us to Telephony Online for a story about Comcast’s second attempt at traffic management (free registration may be required). After the heavy criticism they received from customers and the FCC about their first system, they’ve adopted a more even-handed “protocol agnostic” approach. Nevertheless, they’re once again under scrutiny from the FCC, this time for the way their system interacts with VOIP traffic. By ignoring specific protocols, the occasional bandwidth limits on high-usage customers interferes with those customers’ VOIP, yet Comcast’s own Digital Voice is unaffected. Quoting: “The shocking thing is just how big a Pandora’s box the FCC has appeared to open — and it just keeps getting bigger. When the FCC first started addressing bandwidth usage and DPI issues, it quickly found itself up to its knees in network management minutia. Not long after that, it followed another logical path of the DPI question and asked service providers and Web companies about their use of DPI for behavioral targeting. Now it seemingly has opened up huge questions about what it means to be a voice carrier in the age of IP. It’s not hard to imagine the next step: What about video? Telco IPTV services are delivered in roughly the same way as carrier VoIP services — via packets running on the same physical network but a prioritized logical signaling stream. Is that fair to over-the-top video service providers?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Jan 24 2009

NASA Releases Video Tour of the ISS

Malvineous writes “Expedition 18 Commander Mike Fincke has recently filmed a high-definition 35-minute video tour aboard the International Space Station. For those who missed the HD broadcast on NASA TV, the video is available on YouTube. Due to YouTube length limits, the tour is split into four separate videos. Here are Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Jan 24 2009

Fraudsters Abusing Canada’s Do-Not-Call List

J ROC writes “Phone numbers on Canada’s Do-Not-Call registry have apparently been sold to off-shore telemarketers, scam artists, and other ne’er-do-wells, according to reports in the Globe & Mail and CBC News. The CRTC, which runs the registry, sells lists of phone numbers online for a small fee; making it available to anybody who might be interested in buying it, including con artists. I guess this explains why, ever since I added my number to the registry, I’ve been getting phone calls from 000-000-0000 trying to interest me in some free vacation scam. Canada’s Privacy Commissioner is currently investigating.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Jan 24 2009

Senator Prods Microsoft On H-1B Visas After Layoff Plans

CWmike writes “US Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) told Microsoft this week that US citizens should get priority over H-1B visa holders as the software vendor moves forward on its plan to cut 5,000 jobs. ‘These work visa programs were never intended to allow a company to retain foreign guest workers rather than similarly qualified American workers, when that company cuts jobs during an economic downturn,’ Grassley wrote in a letter sent Thursday to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. The letter asked Microsoft to detail the types of jobs that will be eliminated and how those cuts will affect the company’s H-1B workers.” Reader theodp adds, “On Friday, Microsoft coincidentally announced it would postpone construction of a planned 0 million data center in Grassley’s home state of Iowa, although work on data centers in Chicago and Dublin will continue.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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