Italy May Hold Its Own Pirate Bay Trial
hyanakin writes with an excerpt from TorrentFreak: “Following the Swedish verdict, Italy is now considering starting its own trial against the people involved with The Pirate Bay. This would be the first criminal prosecution against the Pirate Bay ‘founders’ outside their home country.” Funny thing: almost 20 years ago, CD stores in Germany all seemed to be full of bootleg concert CDs pressed in Italy.
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Basic Linux Boot On Open Graphics Card
David Vuorio writes “The Open Graphics Project aims to develop a fully open-source graphics card; all specs, designs, and source code are released under Free licenses. Right now, FPGAs (large-scale reprogrammable chips) are used to build a development platform called OGD1. They’ve just completed an alpha version of legacy VGA emulation, apparently not an easy feat. This YouTube clip shows Gentoo booting up in text mode, with OGD1 acting as the primary display. The Linux Fund is receiving donations, so that ten OGD1 boards can be bought (at cost) for developers. Also, the FSF shows their interest by asking volunteers to help with the OGP wiki.”
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Microsoft Office 2007 SP2 Released, Supports ODF Out of the Box
shutdown -p now writes “On April 28, Microsoft released service pack 2 for Microsoft Office 2007. Among other changes, it includes the earlier-promised support for ODF text documents and spreadsheets, featured prominently on the ‘Save As’ menu alongside Office Open XML and the legacy Office 97-2007 formats. It is also possible to configure Office applications to use ODF as the default format for new documents. In addition, the service pack also includes ‘Save as PDF’ out of the box, and better Firefox support by SharePoint.”
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13 Super Cool Computer Keyboards
Keyboards are an essential part of out computers. We use computer keyboards mostly to type. However in recent times we have seen a diversification in the use and design of keyboards. Take a look at some of these unusual but cool computer keyboards that make them easier to use and much more sophisticated.
No Russian Operating System, At Least For Now
Elektroschock writes “The project by 27 Russian parties to develop a National Operating System for Russia has not taken off, yet (Russian). Ilya Ponomarev, the responsible technology committee chair in the Duma, received a negative response from the government. The government argues that the project and Open Standards would not impact the society and economy. Parliament members regret the setback for Russia’s digital independence. Ponomarev wants to find other interested partners in the Government now.” The Google translation makes it tough to tell whether this project is actually dead, or just shelved for the moment. Any Russian speakers out there who can parse it with greater clarity?
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MN Supreme Court Backs Reasoned Requests For Breathalyzer Source Code
viralMeme writes with news that the Minnesota Supreme Court has upheld the right of drunk-driving defendants to request the source code for the breathalyzer machines used as evidence against them, but only when the defendant provides sufficient arguments to suggest that a review of the code may have an impact on the case. In short: no fishing expeditions. The ruling involves two such requests (PDF), one of which we’ve been covering for some time. In that case, the defendant, Dale Underdahl simply argued that to challenge the validity of the charges, he had to “go after the testing method itself.” The Supreme Court says this was not sufficient. Meanwhile, the other defendant, Timothy Brunner, “submitted a memorandum and nine exhibits to support his request for the source code,” which included testimony from a computer science professor about the usefulness of source code in finding voting machine defects, and a report about a similar case in New Jersey where defects were found in the breathalyzer’s source code. This was enough for the Supreme Court to acknowledge that an examination of the code could “relate to Brunner’s guilt or innocence.”
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Quake Live Dev Says Mac and Linux Are “Top Priority”
AlexMax2742 writes “id’s Marty Stratton notes the following in his Quake Live developer blog on the subject of the Mac and Linux port of Quake Live: ‘These have proved more difficult than expected, but we’re getting close. We expect to also be testing Mac and Linux versions of Quake Live internally this month and then making those publicly available just as soon as we feel they are ready. This work is being done by a separate programmer in parallel with the other work that we’re doing, and is his only priority — point being, that this is a top priority for us and not being delayed because of other work.’ In my humble opinion, it’s awesome to see that kind of (continued) dedication from a company.” The post also indicates that progress is being made on the much-awaited private server functionality, and part two makes brief mention of match broadcasting and community-made maps.
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