Mar 9 2009

Quick Boot Linux Hopes To Win Over Windows Users

Al writes “A company called Presto hopes to exploit the painful amount of time it takes for Windows computers to start up by offering a streamlined version of Linux that boots in just seconds. Presto’s distro comes with Firefox, Skype and other goodies pre-installed and the company has also created an app store so that users can install only what they really need. The software was demonstrated at this years’s Demo conference in Palm Desert, CA. Interestingly, the company barely mentions the name Linux on its website. Is this a clever stealth-marketing ploy for converting Windows users to Linux?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 9 2009

US Forgets How To Make Trident Missiles

Hugh Pickens writes “The US and the UK are trying to refurbish the aging W76 warheads that tip Trident missiles to prolong their life and ensure they are safe and reliable but plans have been put on hold because US scientists have forgotten how to manufacture a mysterious but very hazardous component of the warhead codenamed Fogbank. ‘NNSA had lost knowledge of how to manufacture the material because it had kept few records of the process when the material was made in the 1980s, and almost all staff with expertise on production had retired or left the agency,’ says the report by a US congressional committee. Fogbank is thought by some weapons experts to be a foam used between the fission and fusion stages of the thermonuclear bomb on the Trident Missile and US officials say that manufacturing Fogbank requires a solvent cleaning agent which is ‘extremely flammable’ and ‘explosive,’ and that the process involves dealing with ‘toxic materials’ hazardous to workers. ‘This is like James Bond destroying his instructions as soon as he has read them,’ says John Ainslie, the co-ordinator of the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, adding that ‘perhaps the plans for making Fogbank were so secret that no copies were kept.’ Thomas D’Agostino, administrator or the US National Nuclear Security Administration, told a congressional committee that the administration was spending ‘a lot of money’ trying to make ‘Fogbank’ at Y-12, but ‘we’re not out of the woods yet.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 9 2009

Intel Envisions Shape-Shifting Smartphones

An anonymous reader writes “It’s not sci-fi, but rather advanced robotics research which is leading Intel to envision shape-shifting smartphones. ‘Imagine what you would do with this material,’ says Jason Campbell, a senior researcher at Intel’s Pittsburgh Lab who’s working in collaboration with Carnegie Mellon University. ‘If you want to carry the device, you’d make it as small as possible by making it pack itself as densely as possible. When you go to surf the Web, you’re going to make it big.’ The material being studied is transparent silicon-dioxide hemispheres, which can roll around each other under electrical control to create different shapes. The lab has built 6-inch long actuators, which it’s working to reduce to 1-mm tube-sized prototypes. When will we see a shape-shifting phone? ‘In terms of me being able to buy it, that’s a difficult forecasting problem, because I have to guess about manufacturing costs,’ Campbell said. ‘I won’t do that. But we hope the science will be proved out in three to five years.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 9 2009

Packing Algorithms May Save the Planet

An anonymous reader writes “New Scientist reports on how competitions to devise better packing algorithms could help cut the environmental impact of deliveries and shipping. A new record setter at packing differently-sized discs into the smallest space without overlapping them has potential to be applied to real world 3D problems, researchers claim.” Ok the title might be a little ridiculous, but the ridiculous packaging used to ship a few tiny objects by some shippers is pretty shameful.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 9 2009

Top 4 Instant Sound Effect Sites

It’s embarrassing to admit how long I’ve spent looking online for single-purpose sound effect sites like Instant Rimshot… and it turns out that it is very difficult to Google for these things. My goal was to present the top 5 sites that exist… but instead you’re getting the “top” four.

Share

Mar 9 2009

unlimited connections on Facebook soon!

intresting comment from Mark Zuckerberg. Will we soon be able to have unlimited amount of friends on Facebook?

Share

Mar 9 2009

Adobe’s ADEPT DRM Broken

An anonymous reader writes “I love cabbages has reverse-engineered Adobe’s ADEPT DRM (e-book protection). On February 18, I love cabbages released code that decrypts EPUB e-books protected with ADEPT and followed that up on February 25, with code that decrypts PDF e-books protected with ADEPT. On March 4, I love cabbages was given a DMCA take down notice. And there’s plenty of evidence he got it right. DS:TNG (Dmitry Sklyarov: The Next Generation)?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 9 2009

Norwegian State TV Launches BitTorrent Tracker

The government-owed Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK) has set up its very own BitTorrent tracker to distribute their TV-shows. After a successful test last year they plan to release more DRM-free TV-shows via BitTorrent, using the same tracker software currently in use at The Pirate Bay.

Share

Mar 9 2009

Symantec Warns of Worm’s Return

A third version of Downadup has been identified by Symantec, which says the new variant gives infected machines more powerful instructions to disable antivirus software and analysis tools, among other actions.

Share

Mar 9 2009

When Skittles Met Twitter

A bold social media marketing experiment on the Mars brand’s home page prompted a lively debate at the fourth annual Social Media Conference

Share