Mar
12
2009
Muad’Dave writes “CNN is reporting that the crew of the International Space Station was forced to take refuge from a possible collision of the ISS with a piece of space debris Thursday. From the article: ‘Floating debris from a satellite forced the crew of the international space station to retreat to a safety capsule Thursday, according to a NASA news release. .. The debris was too close for the space station to move out of the way, so the station’s three crew members were temporarily evacuated to a the station’s Soyuz TMA-13 capsule, NASA said.'” Update: 03/12 18:42 GMT by T : The original story incorrectly said the ISS had 18 crew members. Luckily for the three in the Soyuz, that was a mistake.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Satellite Debris Forces ISS Crew Into Rescue Craft | tags: cap, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
12
2009
MarkN writes “Video games are subject to a number of balance issues from which traditional games have largely stayed free. It can be hard finding players of comparable skill-level to create even match-ups, diverse gameplay options can quickly become irrelevant if someone finds a broken feature that beats everything else, and some online games make your ability to play competitively a question of how much time and money you’ve invested in a game, rather than the skill you possess. In this article, I talk about some of the issues relating to fairness and balance in games, in terms of the factors and strategies under the player’s control, the game’s role in potentially handicapping players, and the role a community of gamers plays in setting standards for how games are to be played. What are your thoughts on managing a ‘fair and balanced’ gaming experience?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Dealing With Fairness and Balance In Video Games | tags: cap, games, google | posted in technical news
Mar
12
2009
A new version of lithium battery technology can either provide a higher storage density than current batteries, or can charge and discharge as fast as a supercapacitor, emptying its entire charge in under 10 seconds.
Comments Off on Lithium breakthrough could charge batteries in 10 seconds | tags: cap, technology | posted in technical news
Mar
11
2009
Bam, another Apple rumor vindicated. Apple just doubled the capacity of its iPod shuffle to 4GB as we heard. Available in black or silver for . Developing…
Comments Off on Apple’s redesigned iPod shuffle hits 4GB | tags: Apple, cap | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
MessedRocker writes “I have at least a few USB flash drives around that I haven’t needed since I got my 16GB flash drive, a 40GB external hard drive which I haven’t needed since I upgraded to 500GB, and a couple of SATA hard drives I have pulled out of laptops which are either as large or smaller than the one I have in my laptop now. Furthermore, I don’t really know anyone who needs any hard drives or flash drives. What should I do with my small, obsolete storage devices?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on What To Do With Old USB Keys, Low-Capacity Hard Drives? | tags: cap, google, laptop | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
ColdWetDog writes “It’s not Sigourney Weaver tossing aliens about, but The Register has an interesting blurb about a real human-capable exoskeleton that looks pretty cool (Lockheed-Martin press release). Runs for three hours at 3 mph on internal batteries; max speed is 7 mph. Of course, no price is listed but I suppose if you have to ask you can’t afford it. Team this up with a Big Dog and you’ve got the ultimate high-tech cross-country team. Bring your own batteries. Or just wait for your jetpack to arrive.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Human Exoskeletons Getting Closer | tags: cap, google | posted in technical news
Mar
9
2009
After a two month break, TorrentFreak TV returns with a brand new episode and a new host. This week’s episode includes a recap of of the Pirate Bay trial, Vuze’s secret and some BitTorrent speed tips.
Comments Off on New! TorrentFreak TV Episode 6 | tags: cap, pirate bay, tv | posted in technical news
Mar
9
2009
Vigile writes “To many observers, the success of the GPGPU landscape has really been pushed by NVIDIA and its line of Tesla and Quadro GPUs. While ATI was the first to offer support for consumer applications like Folding@Home, NVIDIA has since taken command of the market with its CUDA architecture and programs like Badaboom and others for the HPC world. PC Perspective has speculation that points to ATI addressing the shortcomings of its lineup with a revised GPU known as RV790 that would both dramatically increase gaming performance as well as more than triple the compute power on double precision floating point operations — one of the keys to HPC acceptance.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on AMD RV790 Architecture To Change GPGPU Landscape? | tags: cap, google, program | posted in technical news
Mar
8
2009
An anonymous reader writes “The UK government, backed by a bunch of charities that raise funds for research into cancer, heart disease and diabetes, has launched an advertising campaign that links the ‘inactive’ or passive gaming lifestyle with death and illness. It’s part of a bigger ‘Change4Life’ campaign that has also linked playing games with making children obese. The new ads show a young child playing a PlayStation game, with the caption ‘Risk an early DEATH, just do nothing.’ To say this has annoyed the UK games industry would be a grave understatement. Trade association ELSPA has already called an urgent meeting with authorities to have the ads pulled, and trade magazine MCV has complained to the country’s Advertising Standards Authority as well. As MCV Associate Editor Tim Ingham says in an impassioned opinion piece, ‘Change4Life’s advertising campaign makes a mockery of everything the industry has achieved in the last decade.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on UK Government Ads Link Games With "Early Death" | tags: cap, games, google, playstation | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
DigitalDame2 writes “PCMag Security Analyst Neil Rubenking has always praised Symantec’s tech support. Lately, though, a number of readers have reported problems with chat support, so he investigated. Rubenking was trying to install Norton 360 version 3.0 on a malware-infested system when the computer crashed with a blue screen error. He connected with Symantec tech support and was told that they could fix the problem, but for a fee of 0! (Here is the transcript and screen-captures of the chat.) Even more, Symantec support suggested that he use a malware-removal tool that wasn’t even made by Symantec.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Symantec Support Gone Rogue? | tags: cap, google, malware, security | posted in technical news