Mar 2 2009

New Startup Hopes to Push Open Source Pharmaceuticals

waderoush writes “Nothing like the open source computing movement has ever caught fire in biology or pharmaceuticals, where intellectual property is king. But drawing inspiration from the people who make Linux software, and the social networking success of Facebook, Merck’s cancer research leader has nailed down million to launch a nonprofit biology platform called Sage, which aims to make it easier for researchers around the world to pool their data to make better drugs. ‘We see this becoming like the Google of biological science. It will be such an informative platform, you won’t be able to make decisions without it,’ says Merck’s Eric Schadt, a co-founder of Sage. He adds: ‘We want this to be like the Internet. Nobody owns it.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 2 2009

New Netbook Offers Detachable Tablet

Engadget is reporting that a new “Touch Book” being previewed at DEMO ’09 in California by the company “Always Innovating” promises a new take on mobile computing devices. Touting 10 to 15 hours of battery life, this ARM-powered netbook weighs less than two pounds, but the true magic comes with the detachable screen that can function as a completely stand-alone touchscreen tablet. The machine is currently running a Linux OS with a touchable 3D UI, the entire screen is magnetic for mounting on a metal surface, and the whole package is being projected for less than 0.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 1 2009

Tweak Vista For Maximum Gaming Performance

Working with a PC that isn’t performing to its maximum potential can be a frustrating experience, but this is particularly true if the machine is used for gaming. But there are a huge number of tweaks that can be applied to help make working with Vista less exasperating.

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Mar 1 2009

Testing Lenovo’s ThinkPad W700ds Dual-Screen Notebook

MojoKid writes “Lenovo’s ThinkPad W700 is a unique product, targeted squarely at mobile professionals who require the power, features, and performance of workstation-class product in a notebook. The machine has a few stand-out integrated features, like a Wacom Digitizer Tablet and X-Rite Color Calibrator. In addition, the ThinkPad W700ds version and adds a secondary, slide-out 10.6″ WXGA+ display, which increases monitor real-estate by 39% spanning across its two panels. HotHardware’s video demonstrates the machine’s arsenal of toys for the graphics pro, in a somewhat portable desktop replacement notebook.”

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Feb 28 2009

Mac OS X 10.5.7 may have Nehalem, Radeon HD 4000 support

In addition to expected fixes, Apple’s upcoming 10.5.7 update to Mac OS X Leopard is now claimed to recognize Intel’s newer Nehalem architecture as well as AMD’s ATI Radeon HD 4000 graphics chipsets.

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Feb 28 2009

Could DoubleTwist Be the Best Mac Media Player?

DoubleTwist is a new, open source, universal media manager in beta for the Mac. It gathers music, videos and photos, supports tons of devices and has a P2P/social networking component. Will it be great?

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Feb 28 2009

MacBook Air hinge defect not covered by Apple’s warranty?

They suggest you just buy a new one instead!

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Feb 28 2009

Hope For Multi-Language Programming?

chthonicdaemon writes “I have been using Linux as my primary environment for more than ten years. In this time, I have absorbed all the lore surrounding the Unix Way — small programs doing one thing well, communicating via text and all that. I have found the command line a productive environment for doing many of the things I often do, and I find myself writing lots of small scripts that do one thing, then piping them together to do other things. While I was spending the time learning grep, sed, awk, python and many other more esoteric languages, the world moved on to application-based programming, where the paradigm seems to be to add features to one program written in one language. I have traditionally associated this with Windows or MacOS, but it is happening with Linux as well. Environments have little or no support for multi-language projects — you choose a language, open a project and get it done. Recent trends in more targeted build environments like cmake or ant are understandably focusing on automatic dependency generation and cross-platform support, unfortunately making it more difficult to grow a custom build process for a multi-language project organically. All this is a bit painful for me, as I know how much is gained by using a targeted language for a particular problem. Now the question: Should I suck it up and learn to do all my programming in C++/Java/(insert other well-supported, popular language here) and unlearn ten years of philosophy, or is there hope for the multi-language development process?”

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Feb 27 2009

Availability of Apple’s high-end iMac starting to fade

The number of digital storefronts reflecting availability of Apple’s high-end iMac configuration is dwindling this week in yet another sign that long-overdue updates to the all-in-one desktop line may be inching their way closer to market.

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Feb 27 2009

Blu-Ray licensing gets easier, will Apple be tempted?

Sony, Philips, and Panasonic announced on Thursday that companies wishing to manufacture Blu-ray devices will now only need to attain a single license in order to do so. That’s a pretty big deal considering that 18 separate companies currently hold Blu-ray patents. Does this mean that we can soon expect Apple to start shipping Macs with Bluray?

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