Apr
26
2009
Comments Off on Analysis: Stark end game for Tigers – BBC News | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Comments Off on Pakistani forces battle militants – BBC News | tags: google, news, security | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
The first netbook computer running the Google Inc.-backed Android mobile operating system on a low-cost ARM chip could become available to customers within three months, the maker’s co-founder said this week.The Alpha 680, designed by Guangzhou Skytone Transmission Technologies Co. Ltd., is going through final testing now, Nixon Wu, Skytone’s c
Comments Off on First Android netbook to cost about $250 | tags: google, mobile | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Reader resistant sends in an update to our discussion a month back on the possibility of violent space weather destroying power grids worldwide during the upcoming solar cycle. Wired is running an interview with Lawrence Joseph, author of “Apocalypse 2012: A Scientific Investigation into Civilization’s End,” and John Kappenman, CEO of electromagnetic damage consulting company MetaTech. The piece brings two new threads to the discussion: the recently discovered presence of an unusually large hole in Earth’s geomagnetic shield, magnifying our vulnerability, and possible steps we can take over the next few years to make the power grid more robust against solar flares and coronal mass ejections. There’s also that whole Mayan 2012 thing. Quoting John Kapperman: “What we’re proposing is to add some fairly small and inexpensive resistors in the transformers’ ground connections. The addition of that little bit of resistance would significantly reduce the amount of the geomagnetically induced currents that flow into the grid. In its simplest form, it’s something that might be made out of cast iron or stainless steel, about the size of a washing machine. …we think it’s do-able for ,000 or less per resistor. That’s less than what you pay for insurance for a transformer. [In the US] there are about 5,000 transformers to consider this for. … We’re talking about 0 million or so. It’s pretty small in the grand scheme of things.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on What We Can Do About Massive Solar Flares | tags: google, Mac | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Hugh Pickens writes “June marks the launch across Brazil of Zeebo, a console that aims to tap an enormous new market for videogaming for the billion-strong, emerging middle classes of such countries as Brazil, India, Mexico, Russia and China. Zeebo uses the same Qualcomm chipsets contained in high-end smartphones, together with 1GB of flash memory, three USB slots and a proprietary dual analogue gamepad. It plugs into a TV and outputs at a 640 x 480 pixel resolution. ‘The key thing is we’re using off-the-shelf components,’ says Mike Yuen, director of the gaming group at Qualcomm. This approach means that, while Zeebo can be priced appropriately for its markets — it will launch at US 9 in Brazil compared to around US 0 (plus another US for a mod chip to play pirated games) for a PlayStation 2 in the region — and next year the company plans to drop the price of the console to 9. But the most important part of the Zeebo ecosystem is its wireless digital distribution that gets around the low penetration of wired broadband in many of these countries, negates the cost of dealing with packaged retail goods, and removes the risk of piracy, with the games priced at about locked to the consoles they’re downloaded to. Zeebo is not meant to directly compete with powerful devices like Sony’s PlayStation 3, Microsoft’s Xbox 360, or the Wii. ‘In Latin America, where there’s a strong gaming culture, that’s what we’ll be, but in India and China we can be more educational or lifestyle-oriented,’ says Yuen. One Indian gaming blog predicts Zeebo will struggle, in part due to the cultural reluctance toward digital distribution and also the lack of piratable games.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Taking Gaming To the Next Billion Players | tags: china, games, google, microsoft, Phone, playstation, playstation 3, tv, wireless, xbox, xbox 360 | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Death Metal tips news that the Irish government has announced their decision to abandon e-voting and return to a paper-based system. “Ireland has already put about million into building out its e-voting infrastructure, but the country has apparently decided that it would be even more expensive to keep going with the system than it would be to just scrap it altogether.” John Gormley, Ireland’s Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government, said, “It is clear from consideration of the Report of the Commission on Electronic Voting that significant additional costs would arise to advance electronic voting in Ireland. …the assurance of public confidence in the democratic system is of paramount importance and it is vital to bring clarity to the present situation.” He added that he still thinks there is a need for electoral reform.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Irish Reject E-Voting, Go Back To Paper | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Comments Off on Swine flu empties Mexico City's churches, streets – The Associated Press | tags: google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Comments Off on Canadians bid farewell to fallen soldier – The Gazette (Montreal) | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
Comments Off on Sri Lanka Rejects Tamil Call for Cease-Fire – New York Times | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
26
2009
theodp writes “Just days after his daughter Nikki’s death in a devastating car crash, real-estate agent Christos Catsouras clicked open an e-mail that appeared to be a property listing. Onto his screen popped his daughter’s bloodied face, captioned with the words ‘Woohoo Daddy! Hey daddy, I’m still alive.’ Now he and his wife are attempting to stop strangers from displaying the grisly images of their daughter — an effort that has transformed Nikki’s death into a case about privacy, cyber-harassment and image control. The images of Nikki, including one of her nearly-decapitated head drooping out the shattered car window, were taken as a routine part of a fatal accident response and went viral after being leaked by two CHP dispatchers. ‘Putting these photos on the Internet,’ says the family’s attorney, ‘was akin to placing them in every mailbox in the world.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on California Family Fights For Privacy, Relief From Cyber-Harassment | tags: cap, google, privacy | posted in technical news