May 8 2009

First Nintendo Commercial

*****


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May 8 2009

Sony’s 53 Year Product Timeline

They have been in comma lately but, through 53 years of history, Sony has created some of the most amazing gadget in history. Some of them changed the world forever. Here you have them all.


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May 8 2009

Google Currently Offering BitTorrent Trackers

There have been many who compare Google to ThePirateBay. The technical front may be more of a grey area that can be debated back and forth, but the line that defines the differences between Google and ThePirateBay may be a little more blurry on that technical side after one observant user spotted Google’s BitTorrent trackers.


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May 8 2009

‘New’ Anti-Piracy Lawyers Chase UK File-Sharers

Over the last couple of years everyone has got used to hearing about UK lawyers Davenport Lyons and their campaigns against those it accuses of illicit file-sharing. Now everyone will have to get used to a new player – they’re called ACS Law and the similarities to Davenport are raising more than a few eyebrows.


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May 8 2009

Microsoft CEO: "We’re Like a Startup in the Search Market"

“The number one player is a lot bigger than us… Google is a very big company in search, and therefore, we’re more like a startup… We can’t invest in everything the market leader can. We’re not gonna be able to out-do, and out-spend somebody who’s revenue is many times bigger than us.”


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May 8 2009

When Comets Attack

Red Flayer writes “Popular Mechanics is running a story that describes one of the more interesting explanations for the Tunguska explosion of 1908: ‘Now, a controversial new scientific study suggests that a chunk of a comet caused the 5-10 megaton fireball, bouncing off the atmosphere and back into orbit around the sun. The scientists have even identified a candidate Tunguska object — now more than 100 million miles away — that will pass close to Earth again in 2045.’ Note that Popular Mechanics’ definition of ‘close to’ is somewhat different than most people’s — the comet will be 3.8 million miles away at its closest. At any rate, the key to this theory is that hydrogen and oxygen in the ice shard exploded upon entering the atmosphere, resulting in the difficult-to-explain blast pattern (previous theories contend that the object must have ‘skipped’ on the atmosphere and then re-entered at the exact same spot). This would also, sadly, dash the theory that Nikola Tesla was responsible.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

Law of Armed Conflict To Apply To Cyberwar

charter6 writes “Gen. Kevin Chilton, the head of STRATCOM, just declared that the Law of Armed Conflict will apply to cyberwar, and that the US won’t rule out conventional (read: kinetic) responses to cyber-attacks. This means that we consider state-supported ‘hackers’ to be subject to the Geneva Conventions and Customary International Law, including the rules of proportionality and distinction (i.e. if we catch them, we can try them for war crimes). Incidentally, it also means we consider non-state cyber-attackers to be illegal enemy combatants, which means we can do all kinds of nasty stuff to them.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

IBM "Invents" 40-Minute Meetings

theodp writes “On Thursday, the USPTO disclosed that self-described patent reform leader IBM wants a patent covering its System and Method for Enhancing Productivity. So what exactly have the four IBM inventors — including two Distinguished Engineers — come up with? In a nutshell, the invention consists of not permitting business meetings to be scheduled for a full hour during certain parts of the day. From the application: ‘The observation is that if an hour were shorter, by a small amount, we would be more focused, and accomplish the same amount of work, but in less real time, thereby increasing productivity.'” I just knew someone would one up my 43-minute-meeting patent. That’s why I’ve already begun intense R&D on my latest invention: the 37-minute meeting! Register early for an early-bird discount. Register even earlier for more of one.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

All Solid State Drives Suffer Performance Drop-off

Lucas123 writes “The recent revelation that Intel’s consumer X25-M solid state drive had a firmware bug that drastically affected its performance led Computerworld to question whether all SSDs can suffer performance degradation due to fragmentation issues. It seems vendors are well aware that the specifications they list on drive packaging represent burst speeds when only sequential writes are being recorded, but after use performance drops markedly over time. The drives with better controllers tend to level out, but others appear to be able to suffer performance problems. Still not fully baked are benchmarking standards that are expected out later this year from several industry organizations that will eventually compel manufacturers to list actual performance with regard to sequential and random reads and writes as well as the drive’s expected lifespan under typical conditions.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 8 2009

How an Intern Stole NASA’s Moon Rocks

schwit1 submitted a story telling the strange tale of how in 2002, rogue NASA interns stole millions of dollars in moon rocks from a building designed not to let that happen. I’d suggest taking the whole thing with a little bit of salt.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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