Mar 31 2009

New Mac App that Tunes Out the Outside World: Self Control

SelfControl, a simple open-source program for Mac OS X that prevents you from resorting to well-worn procrastination techniques by blocking access to websites and e-mail servers.

Share

Mar 31 2009

Cold War Standoff Over ISS Toilet

Hugh Pickens writes “The International Space Station, once a place where astronauts would share food and facilities, is said to be embroiled in a Cold War-like stand-off after a Russian cosmonaut complained he is no longer allowed to use a US toilet or the US gym machine. Gennady Padalka, a veteran Russian cosmonaut, says that space officials from Russia, the United States and other countries now require cosmonauts and astronauts to eat their own food and follow stringent rules on access to other facilities, including lavatories. Padalka, who will be the station’s next commander, says the arguments date back to 2003, when Russia started charging other space agencies for the resources used by their astronauts and other partners in space station responded in kind. ‘Cosmonauts are above the ongoing squabble, no matter what officials decide,’ says Padalka. ‘We are grown-up, well-educated and good-mannered people and can use our own brains to create normal relationship. It’s politicians and bureaucrats who can’t reach agreement, not us, cosmonauts and astronauts.’ While sharing food in the past helped the crew feel like a team, the new rules oblige Russian cosmonauts and US astronauts to eat their own food. ‘They also recommend us to only use national toilets,’ says Padalka. ‘What is going on has an adverse effect on our work.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 31 2009

Google Chrome Beta For Mac Might Be Released By Fall

The open source Google Chromium repository now has an OS X Cocoa shell. We downloaded and compiled the latest OS X build of Google’s browser, and we talked to the developers to get a sense of how long it will be before Mac users can get their hands on a working beta.

Share

Mar 31 2009

Game Companies Face Hard Economic Choices

Hugh Pickens writes “The NY Times reports that the proliferation of free or low-cost games on the Web and for phones limits how high the major game publishers can set prices, so makers are sometimes unable to charge enough to cover the cost of producing titles. The cost of making a game for the previous generation of machines was about million, not including marketing. The cost of a game for the latest consoles is over twice that — million is typical, and it can be much more. Reggie Fils-Aime, chief marketing officer for Nintendo of America, says publishers of games for its Wii console need to sell one million units of a game to turn a profit, but the majority of games, analysts said, sell no more than 150,000 copies. Developers would like to raise prices to cover development costs, but Mike McGarvey, former chief executive of Eidos and now an executive with OnLive, says that consumers have been looking at console games and saying, ‘This is too expensive and there are too many choices.’ Since makers cannot charge enough or sell enough games to cover the cost of producing most titles, video game makers have to hope for a blockbuster. ‘The model as it exists is dying,’ says McGarvey.” As we discussed recently, OnLive is trying to change that by moving a big portion of the hardware requirements to the cloud. Of course, many doubt that such a task can be accomplished in a way that doesn’t severely degrade gameplay, but it now appears that Sony is working on something similar as well.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 30 2009

Locating the Real MySQL

An anonymous reader writes “In a blog post, Patrick Galbraith, an ex-core engineer on the MySQL Server team, raises the question: “What is the official branch of MySQL?” With Monty Widenius having left Sun and forked off MySQL for MariaDB, and Brian Aker running the Drizzle fork inside of Sun, where is the official MySQL tree? Sun may own the trademark, but it looks like there is doubt as to whether they are still the maintainers of the actual codebase after their B acquisition of the code a year ago. Smugmug’s Don MacAskhill, who is the keynote at the upcoming MySQL Conference, has commented that he is now using the Percona version of MySQL, and is no longer relying on Sun’s.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 30 2009

Chrome for OS X: State of the Browser

The open source Google Chromium repository now has an OS X Cocoa shell. We downloaded and compiled the latest OS X build of Google’s browser, and we talked to the developers to get a sense of how long it will be before Mac users can get their hands on a working beta.

Share

Mar 30 2009

Western Internet Censorship: The Beginning of the End?

Australia and Germany are the only liberal democracies proposing a mandatory internet censorship regime. All of the schemes operate, or are proposed to operate, through multi-million dollar national networks of censorship machines. The machines spy on the nation as each citizen attempts to read on the internet.

Share

Mar 30 2009

Interview With Google’s V8 Author Lars Bak

Dr Pete writes “Financial Times has an interesting piece about Lars Bak and Kasper Lund the authors of the V8 virtual machine in Google’s Chrome browser. ‘Chrome attracted more than 10 million users in its first 100 days. Although that’s an impressive number, it still only translates into about 1 per cent of browser usage online. It will be a while before it can compete with Firefox, Internet Explorer and others. In December last year, Google announced that Chrome was now out of its development, or Beta, phase and is ready to be shipped as a pre-installed browser on some PCs. This could rapidly increase the number of users. Moreover, the European Commission’s antitrust battle with Microsoft over, among other things, how its own browser, Internet Explorer, is integrated into its Windows operating system may give competitors such as Google a chance to claim ground.'” Interestingly enough Google Chrome is currently fighting it out with Safari as the #3 web browser on Slashdot.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Mar 30 2009

Building a Brain on a Silicon Chip

An international team of scientists in Europe has created a silicon chip designed to function like a human brain. With 200,000 neurons linked up by 50 million synaptic connections, the chip is able to mimic the brain’s ability to learn more closely than any other machine.

Share

Mar 30 2009

Is Linux ready for the "average" user?

The other day I realized that it had been a long time since I’d talked about Linux as a whole as opposed to looking at specific distros. Also, over the past few weeks I’ve spent quite a lot of time discussing Windows, in particular Windows 7, and Apple’s Mac OS X.

Share