Feb 28 2009

Mac OS X 10.5.7 may have Nehalem, Radeon HD 4000 support

In addition to expected fixes, Apple’s upcoming 10.5.7 update to Mac OS X Leopard is now claimed to recognize Intel’s newer Nehalem architecture as well as AMD’s ATI Radeon HD 4000 graphics chipsets.

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Feb 28 2009

Cities face 20% cuts in water use during crisis

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a statewide drought emergency Friday, urging cities to cut their use of water 20 percent and paving the way for projects such as desalination plants and water recycling projects to bypass standard environmental reviews.

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Feb 28 2009

Intel Shows Futuristic R&D Efforts, Electromagnetic Catoms

The devices could then be morphed through software controls or even human touch. Think about having the ability to squeeze your cell phone down to the size of pack of gum when it’s in your pocket, and then being able to pull it out, and stretch it to the size of a paperback book so its screen could be larger while browsing the web, for example.

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Feb 28 2009

Review: Samsung’s 256GB Solid State Disk Drive

I put the drive up against Intel’s X25-M SSD, which I consider the industry leader for SSDs when it comes to performance.

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Feb 28 2009

Top 10 Tools for Running Your Own Blog or Web Site

Having your own hosted web domain has never been cheaper, or easier, with the vast array of free resources out there. Here are our ten favorite tools to help anyone launch and maintain their internet presence.

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Feb 28 2009

Is Climate Change Affecting Bushfires?

TapeCutter writes “After the devastating firestorm in Australia, there has been a lot of speculation in the press about the role of climate change. For the ‘pro’ argument the BBC article points to research by the CSIRO. For the ‘con’ argument they quote David Packham of Monash university, who is not alone in thinking ‘…excluding prescribed burning and fuel management has led to the highest fuel concentrations we have ever had…’ However, the DSE’s 2008 annual report states; ‘[The DSE] achieved a planned burning program of more than 156,000 hectares, the best result for more than a decade. The planned burning of forest undergrowth is by far the most powerful management tool available…’ I drove through Kilmore on the evening of the firestorm, and in my 50 years of living with fire I have never seen a smoke plume anything like it. It was reported to be 15 km high and creating its own lightning. There were also reports of car windscreens and engine blocks melting. So what was it that made such an unusual firestorm possible, and will it happen again?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 28 2009

Contest For a Better Open-WRT Wireless Router GUI

Reader RoundSparrow sends word of a contest, with big cash prizes, being mounted by a commercial vender of open source Open-WRT routers. You have 10 months to come up with “the most impressive User Interface/Firmware for Ubiquiti’s newly released open-source embedded wireless platform, the RouterStation.” Entries are required to have open source licensing and will all be released. First prize is 0,000, with four runners-up receiving ,000. RoundSparrow adds: “Could be built on top of existing X-WRT or LuCI OpenWRT web interfaces. OpenWRT Kamikaze 8.09 was just released. Now is perfect timing for OpenWRT to get some kick-ass interface and usability ideas. I’m not affiliated with the contest vendor.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 28 2009

How To Turn Customers Into Pirates

In the past we’ve given plenty of examples of how DRM hurts paying customers instead of the people it is meant for. Still, many software companies prefer to see their customers as potential ‘thieves’ but what they don’t realize, however, is that they are actually breeding pirates instead of stopping them.

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Feb 28 2009

Scientists Build an Ark To Save Jungle Amphibians

Peace Corps Online writes “In the 1980s a deadly fungus called chytrid appeared in Central America and began moving through mountain streams, killing as many as 8 out of 10 frogs and extinguishing some species entirely. (The fungus has little effect on any other vertebrates.) Now a returned Peace Corps volunteer and her husband have opened the El Valle Amphibian Conservation Center in western Panama to house more than 600 frogs as chytrid cuts a lethal path through the region. Experts agree that the only hope of saving some of the more endangered, restricted-range species is to collect animals from remaining wild populations, establish captive breeding programs, and be prepared to conduct reintroduction projects in the future. But before reintroduction can even begin, scientists must find some way to overcome the chytrid in native habitats using vaccines, breeding for resistance, or genetic engineering of the fungus. Conservationists are budgeting for 25 years of captive breeding, long enough, they believe, to allow some response to chytrid to be found. ‘There are more species in need of rescue than there are resources to rescue them,’ says Amphibian Ark’s program director. ‘When you’re talking about insidious threats like disease or climate change, threats that can’t be mitigated in the wild, there’s simply no alternative.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 28 2009

The CDA Is Dead, But States Are Trying To Revive It

oliphaunt writes “This week at The Legality, Tracy Frazier has an article discussing the damage that can be done by anonymous online comments. While regulars here are familiar with infamous bits of Net censorship like the Fishman Affidavit fiasco, and everyone has been an anonymous coward at least once or twice, some of you may not know about the conflict between Heide Iravani and AutoAdmit.com. Heide eventually filed a lawsuit because the first result for a Google search on her name brought up anonymous comments on AutoAdmit that accused her of carrying an STD and sleeping her way to the top of her class. The Communications Decency Act was supposed to prevent this kind of thing, but an injunction prevented it from ever being enforced and eventually the Supreme Court killed it. Should the law be changed?” The article links to a proposal from last summer in the New Jersey legislature that would institute a DMCA-like takedown regime for allegedly defamatory content posted on a Web site, and would allow aggrieved parties to demand the identity of anonymous posters without a subpoena. No indication of how that proposal fared. Also linked is a recent North Carolina proposal that would criminalize the act of defaming someone using an electronic medium. This proposal shields Web sites from liability and explicitly does not apply to anonymous speech.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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