Apr
25
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Slate argues that we’re going about verifying humans on the Web all wrong: ‘As Alan Turing laid out in the 1950 paper that postulated his test, the goal is to determine whether a computer can behave like a human, not perform tasks that a human can. The reason CAPTCHAs have a term limit is that they measure ability, not behavior. … the random, circuitous way that people interact with Web pages — the scrolling and highlighting and typing and retyping — would be very difficult for a bot to mimic. A system that could capture the way humans interact with forms algorithmically could eventually relieve humans of the need to prove anything altogether.’ Seems smart, if an algorithm could actually do that.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on A Vision For a World Free of CAPTCHAs | tags: cap, google, web | posted in technical news
Apr
25
2009
Al writes “Tech Review has an article about the progress being made on prosthetic arms that can be controlled using nerves that once connected to the missing limb via muscles in the chest. Todd Kuiken, director of the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago’s Center for Bionic Medicine has pioneered the technique, which has so far given more than 30 patients the ability to control a mechanical prosthetic simply by thinking about moving their old arm. Those who have had the procedure report using their arm to slice hot peppers, open a bag of flour, put on a belt, operate a tape measure, or remove a new tennis ball from a container. The next step is to add sensing capabilities to the arms so that this information can be fed back to the reconnected nerves.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Improving the Abilities of Bionic Arm Patients | tags: cap, google | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Comments Off on Chrysler reaches deal with CAW – Toronto Star | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Comments Off on California expects to find more new flu cases – Reuters | tags: google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Comments Off on ANC to fall short of two-thirds of vote – Reuters UK | tags: google, Mac, news, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
With the increased focus on managing energy costs and reducing human impact on the environment in the form of carbon emissions, we’re being encouraged now more than ever to turn our PCs off or let them sleep when they are not in use. But our digital lives are increasingly dependent on maintaining active network connections for communications…
Comments Off on Tomorrow’s Computers Might Talk In Their Sleep | tags: computers, network | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Kaiser Permanente, a health care system with 8.6 million members, is offering some of its members a USB flash drive containing all of their personal medical information.
Comments Off on Kaiser Permanente Puts Med Records On USB Drives | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
It is just something you have to see to really understand.
Comments Off on Coolest Damn Web Design Ever | tags: web | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Gamefly, the popular video game rental service that operates through the mail, has filed a complaint with the Postal Regulatory Commission about the high number of games that are lost or stolen in the mail. The complaint (PDF) asserts that the postal service’s automated sorting machines have a tendency to break a small percentage of discs, and that preferential treatment is given to DVD rental services like Netflix and Blockbuster. “According to Gamefly’s numbers, it mails out 590,000 games and receives 510,000 games back from subscribers a month. The company sees, depending on the mailer, between one and two percent of its games broken in transit. … Even if you assume the number is one percent, and a game costs to replace, that’s an astounding 5,000 a month in lost merchandise. … That’s not the only issue — games are also stolen in transit, which has lead to the arrest of 19 Postal Service employees.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Gamefly Complains of Poor Treatment From USPS | tags: games, google, Mac, netflix | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
FP writes “On Friday morning, lawyers urged a federal judge to bar RealNetworks from selling software that allows consumers to copy their DVDs to computer hard drives, arguing that the Seattle-based company’s product is an illegal pirating tool. RealNetworks’ lawyers countered later in the morning that its RealDVD product is equipped with piracy protections that limits a DVD owner to making a single copy and a legitimate way to back up copies of movies legally purchased. This legal battle began with a restraining order last October which stopped the sale of RealDVD. More coverage is available at NPR. The same judge who shut down Napster is presiding over the three-day trial.” Reader IonOtter points out that later in the day, Judge Patel sealed the court after DVD Copy Control Association lawyers “argued that public testimony of aspects of the CSS copy-control technology would violate trade secrets.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Judge Opens Hearing On RealDVD Legal Battle | tags: consumers, google, network, technology | posted in technical news