Mar
4
2009
Matt_dk writes “Using ESO’s Very Large Telescope, astronomers have gained valuable new insights about the atmosphere of the dwarf planet Pluto. The scientists found unexpectedly large amounts of methane in the atmosphere, and also discovered that the atmosphere is hotter than the surface by about 40 degrees, although it still only reaches a frigid minus 180 degrees Celsius. These properties of Pluto’s atmosphere may be due to the presence of pure methane patches or of a methane-rich layer covering the dwarf planet’s surface.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The Lower Atmosphere of Pluto Revealed | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
Ripit writes “President Obama on Tuesday nominated Julius Genachowski as the nation’s top telecommunications regulator, picking a campaign adviser who has divided his career between Washington, D.C., political jobs and working as an Internet executive. Genachowski is likely to continue the Democratic push for more Net neutrality regulations, which are opposed by some conservatives and telecommunications providers. He was a top Obama technology adviser and aided in crafting a technology platform that supported Net neutrality rules.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Obama Picks Net Neutrality Backer As FCC Chief | tags: google, news, obama, technology, telecommunications | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
Dan B. writes “The Guardian has a nice piece wrapping up the trial in Sweden for the co-defendants in the P2P trial-of-the-decade, that of The Pirate Bay. ‘Today, the defense lawyers summed up. It was a short trial and not a particularly merry one, but it could have far-reaching effects.’ Surprisingly, when the defendants hit the stand they didn’t bash copyright or take a libertarian approach; it all came back to the tried and tested formula for criminal defense, ‘I am not responsible.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on A Short Summary Following the Pirate Bay Trial | tags: google, news, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
M3rk sends an excerpt from an opinion piece on Gametopius discussing what it takes for an open game world to be successful. Interesting stories and characters are important, but they must be balanced by varied and entertaining gameplay. The lack of either will be a limiting factor in how many people return to play once the primary plot is completed. Quoting: “A game like GTA IV takes itself and its fiction very seriously. It spends a lot of time, effort, and gameplay resources convincing you that the world you are traveling through is the same world that the story and cutscenes take place in. It may not be a game that allows you to own or control property to the degree seen in Burnout Paradise or Saints Row II, but it wants its world to be cohesive, not divided. … While GTA IV’s game systems almost serve its plot, Saints Row II and Burnout Paradise live for their game mechanics. Sure, these worlds are fun to look at and explore, but any exploration and discovery that the player enjoys merely drives them to these games’ raison d’être: fun systems to play with.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Building a Successful "Open" Game World | tags: games, google, mechanics | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
onehitwonder writes in with a CIO opinion piece arguing that potential employees need to stand up to employers who snoop the Web for insights into their after-work activities, often disqualifying them as a result. “Employers are increasingly trolling the web for information about prospective employees that they can use in their hiring decisions. Consequently, career experts advise job seekers to not post any photos, opinions or information on blogs and social networking websites (like Slashdot) that a potential employer might find remotely off-putting. Instead of cautioning job seekers to censor their activity online, we job seekers and defenders of our civil liberties should tell employers to stop snooping and to stop judging our behavior outside of work, writes CIO.com Senior Online Editor Meridith Levinson. By basing professional hiring decisions on candidates’ personal lives and beliefs, employers are effectively legislating people’s behavior, and they’re creating an online environment where people can’t express their true beliefs, state their unvarnished opinions, be themselves, and that runs contrary to the free, communal ethos of the Web. Employers that exploit the Web to snoop into and judge people’s personal lives infringe on everyone’s privacy, and their actions verge on discrimination.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Should Job Seekers Tell Employers To Quit Snooping? | tags: google, network, networking, privacy, web | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
An anonymous reader writes “A fireball streaked over Austin, Texas on February 15 producing sonic booms and startling people for hundreds of miles. The video of the event was shown on national television and viewed by thousands of people on the Net. The first news reports speculated that the fireball might have been debris from a February 13th collision between two satellites over Siberia but space experts said that the object was probably a meteor. Now this has been confirmed: experienced meteorite hunters located a strewnfield about 120 miles north of the filming site of the Austin cameraman and have recovered over 100 freshly fallen meteorites.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Meteorite Hunters Find the West Texas Fireball | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
Google CEO Eric Schmidt commenting about Twitter:”Speaking as a computer scientist, I view all of these as sort of poor man’s email systems.”
Comments Off on Google CEO: Twitter A ‘Poor Man’s Email System’ | tags: email, google, twitter | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
Yesterday, a group of technology entrepreneurs from the UK on a skiing vacation in the Swiss Alps (Verbier) lost two of their party around 4 PM CET. Other members of the group put out a request on Twitter in order to learn the numbers of their mobile phones, so they could use the signals to track them down.
Comments Off on Twitter, Google Maps Used To Track Down Two Missing Skiers | tags: google, mobile, Phone, technology, twitter | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
Pickens writes “Paleontologists recently discovered the world’s oldest brain nestled within a 300-million-year-old fish fossil of one of the extinct relatives of modern ratfishes, also known as ‘host sharks’ or chimaeras. These chimaera relatives, called iniopterygians, represented bizarre beasts that sported massive skulls with huge eye sockets, shark-like teeth in rows, tails with clubs, huge pectoral fins that were placed almost on their backs, and bone-like spikes or hooks tipping the fins. The brain shows details such as a large vision lobe and optic nerve stretching to the proper place on the braincase, which fits with the fish’s large eye sockets. The ear canals of the extinct fish only exist on a horizontal plane so the fish could only detect side-to-side movements, and not up or down. ‘There is nothing like this known today; it is really bizarre,’ said John Maisey, paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. ‘But now that we know that brains might be preserved in such ancient fossils, we can start looking for others. We are limited in information about early vertebrate brains, and the evolution of the brain lies at the core of vertebrate history.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The 300 Million Year Old Brain | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
4
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Ars Technica has a very thorough post of some of the technologies that Microsoft researchers showed off at TechFest last week. ‘The exact number of projects that were demonstrated at TechFest 2009 is not clear, but here’s a quick rundown of about 35 research projects that haven’t received much coverage, accompanied by links that will let you further explore if your interest is piqued. Remember that these are concepts and prototypes, not finished products, and they may never end up becoming anything significant.'” While Microsoft has been criticized for squandering a fortune on R&D, there can be no doubt that they are showing off some cool tech here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Roundup of Microsoft Research At TechFest 2009 | tags: google, microsoft | posted in technical news