Feb 12 2009

US Nuclear Weapons Lab Loses 67 Computers

pnorth writes “Officials from New Mexico’s Los Alamos nuclear weapons laboratory have confessed that 67 of its computers are missing, with no less than 13 of them having disappeared over the past year alone. A memo [PDF] leaked by the Project on Government Oversight watchdog brought the lost nuclear laptops to the public’s attention, but the Energy Department’s National Nuclear Security Administration dismissed fears the computers contained highly-sensitive or classified information, noting it was more likely to cause ‘cybersecurity issues.’ Three of the 13 computers which went missing in the past year were stolen from a scientist’s home on January 16 and the memo also mentioned a BlackBerry belonging to another staff member had been lost ‘in a sensitive foreign country.’ The labs faced similar issues back in 2003 when 22 laptops were designated as being ‘unlocated.'”

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Feb 12 2009

UK University Making Universal Game Emulator

Techradar reports that researchers at the University of Portsmouth in England are working on a project to create a game emulator that will “recognise and play all types of videogames and computer files from the 1970s through to the present day.” One of the major goals of the project is to preserve software from early in the computer age. David Anderson of the Humanities Computing Group said, “Early hardware, like games consoles and computers, are already found in museums. But if you can’t show visitors what they did, by playing the software on them, it would be much the same as putting musical instruments on display but throwing away all the music. … Games particularly tend not to be archived because they are seen as disposable, pulp cultural artefacts, but they represent a really important part of our recent cultural history. Games are one of the biggest media formats on the planet and we must preserve them for future generations.”

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Feb 12 2009

UK University Making Universal Game Emulator

Techradar reports that researchers at the University of Portsmouth in England are working on a project to create a game emulator that will “recognise and play all types of videogames and computer files from the 1970s through to the present day.” One of the major goals of the project is to preserve software from early in the computer age. David Anderson of the Humanities Computing Group said, “Early hardware, like games consoles and computers, are already found in museums. But if you can’t show visitors what they did, by playing the software on them, it would be much the same as putting musical instruments on display but throwing away all the music. … Games particularly tend not to be archived because they are seen as disposable, pulp cultural artefacts, but they represent a really important part of our recent cultural history. Games are one of the biggest media formats on the planet and we must preserve them for future generations.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Feb 11 2009

Foxmarks bookmark syncing service comes to Safari

The free Foxmarks bookmark backup and synchronization service is now available for Safari. It allows users to maintain a single set of bookmarks on multiple computers, which is good news for anyone who juggles multiple devices.

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Feb 10 2009

Hackers broke into FAA computers

A union leader says hackers broke into the Federal Aviation Administration’s computer system last week, accessing the names and Social Security numbers of 45,000 employees and retirees.

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Feb 9 2009

How To, When You Have To Encrypt Absolutely Everything?

Dark Neuron writes “My institution has thousands of computers, and is looking at starting an IT policy to encrypt everything, all hard drives, including desktops, laptops, external hard drives, USB flash drives, etc. I am looking at an open source product for Windows, Mac, UNIX, as well as portable hard drives, but I am concerned about overhead and speed penalties. Does anyone have experience and/or advice with encrypting every single device in a similar situation?”

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Feb 9 2009

Psystar Wins a Round Against Apple

Daengbo writes “‘A federal judge last week ruled that Psystar Corp. can continue its countersuit against Apple Inc., giving the Mac clone maker a rare win in its seven-month-old battle with Apple. He also hinted that if Psystar proves its allegations, others may then be free to sell computers with Mac OS X already installed.’ Apple is currently suing Psystar over its sale of Mac clones.”

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Feb 9 2009

Acer Aspire One AOD150 – Washington Post


Cheap Laptops

Acer Aspire One AOD150
Washington Post – 51 minutes ago
I love it when a company sees fit to shake things up a little and cook up some crazy new design. The Acer Aspire One AOD150 is not that netbook.
Acer Aspire One (10-inch) PC Magazine
Acer finally gets a 10-inch Netbook: the Aspire One AOD150 CNET News
PC World – Computer Shopper – engadget – Cheap Laptops
all 8 news articles
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Feb 8 2009

2009 a year of hype for cloud computing, said one analyst – ITBusiness.ca

2009 a year of hype for cloud computing, said one analyst
ITBusiness.ca – 6 Feb 2009
According to an analyst at London, Ontario-based Info-Tech Research Group, 2009 will be cloud computing's year in terms of garnering lots of hype and adopters.
New survey links cloud computing to virtualization ZDNet
Virtualization goes beyond server consolidation Express Computers
IT Business Edge
all 4 news articles
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Feb 8 2009

Hackers Using Fake Parking Tickets to Infect Computers

In North Dakota, oddly enough, hackers have hit on a new way to infect innocent computers: fake parking tickets that direct car owners to a site where they are instructed to download malicious software.

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