Mar 27 2009

Data Preservation and How Ancient Egypt Got It Right

storagedude writes to tell us that a storage geek has an interesting article on why ancient Egyptians were better than us at data preservation — and what we need to do to get caught up. “After rocks, the human race moved on to writing on animal skins and papyrus, which were faster at recording but didn’t last nearly as long. Paper and printing presses were even faster, but also deteriorated more quickly. Starting to see a pattern? And now we have digital records, which might last a decade before becoming obsolete. Recording and handing down history thus becomes an increasingly daunting task, as each generation of media must be migrated to the next at a faster and faster rate, or we risk losing vital records.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

Are Long URLs Wasting Bandwidth?

Ryan McAdams writes “Popular websites, such as Facebook, are wasting as much as 75MBit/sec of bandwidth due to excessively long URLs. According to a recent article over at O3 Magazine, they took a typical Facebook home page, looked at the traffic statistics from compete.com, and figured out the bandwidth savings if Facebook switched from using URL paths which, in some cases, run over 150 characters in length, to shorter ones. It looks at the impact on service providers, with the wasted bandwidth used by the subsequent GET requests for these excessively long URLs. Facebook is just one example; many other sites have similar problems, as well as CMS products such as Word Press. It’s an interesting approach to web optimization for high traffic sites.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

Australian ISP Argues For BitTorrent Users

taucross writes “Australian ISP iiNet is making a very bold move. They are asking the court to accept that essentially, BitTorrent cannot be used to distribute pirated content because a packet does not represent a substantial portion of the infringing material. They are also hedging their bets purely on the strength of the movie studios’ ‘forensic’ evidence. This ruling will go straight to the heart of Australia’s copyright law. At last, an ISP willing to stand up for its customers! Let’s hope we have a technically-informed judge.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

Study Suggests Crabs Can Feel Pain

tritonman writes “A new scientific study suggests that crabs can feel and remember pain. From the article: ‘”More research is needed in this area where a potentially very large problem is being ignored,” said Elwood. Legislation to protect crustaceans has been proposed but it is likely to cover only scientific research. Millions of crustacean are caught or reared in aquaculture for the food industry. There is no protection for these animals (with the possible exception of certain states in Australia) as the presumption is that they cannot experience pain.’ Perhaps soon there will be a study to determine that vegetables feel pain as well, then all of the vegans will only be allowed to eat rocks.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

Project Aims For 5x Increase In Python Performance

cocoanaut writes “A new project launched by Google’s Python engineers could make the popular programming language five times faster. The project, which is called Unladen Swallow, seeks to replace the Python interpreter’s virtual machine with a new just-in-time (JIT) compilation engine that is built on LLVM. The first milestone release, which was announced at PyCon, already offers a 15-25% performance increase over the standard CPython implementation. The source code is available from the Google Code web site.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

Android Scans DVD Bar Codes, Downloads Movies

cars writes “Remember how you can scan any bar code with an android phone and it will tell you where to find that product for cheaper? A new Android application called BarTor (formerly ScanTorrent) can scan any DVD bar code and then signals either uTorrent or Vuze on your PC to download the movie from BitTorrent. How long do you think this will last?” Other features include purchase opportunities on barcode lookup, Google base product lookup, and site-level filtering.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

More IT Pros Could Turn To E-Crime In Poor Economy

snydeq writes to mention that a recent survey by KPMG shows that many people feel that out-of-work IT workers will be much more tempted to turn to criminal activities due to the down economy. This, coupled with an E-crime survey that shows fraud committed by managers, employees, and customers tripled between 2007 and 2008 paints an interesting picture. “In other survey results, 45 percent of respondents who handle critical national infrastructure said they are seeing an increase in the number of attacks on their systems. Fifty-one percent of respondents from the same category said the technical sophistication of those attacks is getting better. Sixty-eight percent said that of all kinds of malicious code they felt Trojan horse programs — ones that are designed to look harmless but can steal data along with other functions — had the most impact on their businesses. Rootkits are the next highest concern, followed by spyware, worms, viruses, mobile malicious code and, finally, adware.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 27 2009

YouTube Adds A Twitter Button

Everybody’s doing it. Even YouTube has succumbed to Twitter mania.

Share

Mar 27 2009

Ghost Writers Hired To Tweet For Celebrities, Politicains

Someone has to do all that writing, even if each entry is barely a sentence long. In many cases, celebrities have turned to ‘ghost Twitterers’ who keep fans updated on the latest twists and turns. Ghost writers are popular for books, but the idea of having someone else write continual updates of one’s daily life seems slightly absurd.

Share

Mar 27 2009

AOL Never Should Have Tried To Become Yahoo

Can AOL turn the things around? Maybe. But what and when went wrong?

Share