Jan 26 2009

Crime Stoppers celebrates 21 years in Cochrane District – Timmins Daily Press

Crime Stoppers celebrates 21 years in Cochrane District
Timmins Daily Press – 24 Jan 2009
Today, Crime Stoppers has helped in the arrest of more than 50000 people in Ontario alone, recovering millions of dollars of stolen property and illegal drugs.
Tips to Waco Crime Stoppers rise to start 2009 Waco Tribune Herald
Crime Stoppers launches in-school programme SUN Weekend
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Jan 26 2009

How Quake Wars Met the Ray Tracer

An anonymous reader writes “Intel released the article ‘Quake Wars Gets Ray Traced’ (PDF) which details the development efforts of the research team that applied a real-time ray tracer to Enemy Territory: Quake Wars . It describes the benefits and challenges of transparency textures with this rendering technology. Further insight is given into what special effects are most costly. Examples of glass and a 3D water implementation are shown. The outlook hints into the area of freely programmable many-core processors, like Intel’s upcoming Larrabee, that might be able to handle such a workload.” We mentioned the ray-traced Quake Wars last in June; the PDF here delves into the implementation details, rather than just showing a demo, and explains what parts of the game give the most difficulty in going from rasterization to ray-tracing.

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Jan 25 2009

Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste – Sudbury Star

Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste
Sudbury Star – 23 Jan 2009
A new program being launched Thursday will aim to divert hazardous household waste like old batteries from Ontario landfills by returning it to the store.
Provincial, retail partnership makes waste disposal easier Sault Star
• It's easier to recycle hazardous waste Hamilton Spectator
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Jan 25 2009

NSA Monitors Everybody, Targets Reporters and Dissidents

In a scenario that sounds like the ramblings of a conspiracy theorist, former NSA analyst and now-whistleblower Russell Tice unveiled a massive NSA spying and wiretap program, which he claims vacuumed up an astonishing amount of communications and financial data on journalists and innocent Americans.

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Jan 25 2009

Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste – Sudbury Star

Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste
Sudbury Star – 23 Jan 2009
A new program being launched Thursday will aim to divert hazardous household waste like old batteries from Ontario landfills by returning it to the store.
Provincial, retail partnership makes waste disposal easier Sault Star
• It's easier to recycle hazardous waste Hamilton Spectator
all 9 news articles
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Jan 25 2009

Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste – Sudbury Star

Province wants retailers to collect hazardous waste
Sudbury Star – 23 Jan 2009
A new program being launched Thursday will aim to divert hazardous household waste like old batteries from Ontario landfills by returning it to the store.
Provincial, retail partnership makes waste disposal easier Sault Star
• It's easier to recycle hazardous waste Hamilton Spectator
CNW Telbec (Communiqué de presse) – CNW Telbec (Communiqué de presse) – CNW Telbec (Communiqué de presse)
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Jan 24 2009

Neo-Nazis join Adopt-A-Highway trash cleanup

The Springfield unit of the National Socialist Movement, a neo-Nazi group, has joined Missouri’s “Adopt-A-Highway” volunteer litter pickup program. “It’s a First Amendment thing, and we can’t discriminate as long as they pick up the trash,” said Bob Edwards, a spokesman for the transportation department.

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Jan 24 2009

Long-Term PC Preservation Project?

failcomm writes “I’ve been talking with my son’s (middle-school) computer lab teacher about a ‘time capsule’ project. The school has a number of ‘retirement age’ PCs (5-6 years old — Dells, HPs, a couple of Compaqs), and we’ve been kicking around the idea of trying to preserve a working system and some media (CDs and/or DVDs), and locking them away to be preserved for some period of time (say 50 years); to be opened by students of the future. The goal would be to have instructions on how to unpack the system, plug it into the wall (we’ll assume everyone is still using 110v US outlets), and get the system to boot. Also provide instructions on how to load the media and see it in action; whether it is photos or video or games or even student programs — whatever. So first, is this idea crazy? Second, how would we go about packing/preserving various components? Lastly, any suggestions on how to store it long term? (Remember, this is a school project, so we can’t exactly just ‘freeze it in carbonite’; practical advice would be appreciated.)”

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Jan 24 2009

BotPrize — A Turing Test For Bots

Philip Hingston writes “Computers can’t play like people — yet. An unusual kind of computer game bot-programming contest has just been held in Perth, Australia, as part of the IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence and Games. The contest was not about programming the bot that plays the best. The aim was to see if a bot could convince another player that it was actually a human player. Game Development Studio 2K Australia (creator of BioShock) provided ,000 cash plus a trip to their studio in Canberra for anyone who could create a bot to pass this ‘Turing Test for Bots.’ People like to play against opponents who are like themselves — opponents with personality, who can surprise, who sometimes make mistakes, yet don’t robotically make the same mistakes over and over. Computers are superbly fast and accurate at playing games, but can they be programmed to be more fun to play — to play like you and me?” Read on for the rest of Philip’s thoughts.

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Jan 24 2009

Senator Prods Microsoft On H-1B Visas After Layoff Plans

CWmike writes “US Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) told Microsoft this week that US citizens should get priority over H-1B visa holders as the software vendor moves forward on its plan to cut 5,000 jobs. ‘These work visa programs were never intended to allow a company to retain foreign guest workers rather than similarly qualified American workers, when that company cuts jobs during an economic downturn,’ Grassley wrote in a letter sent Thursday to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. The letter asked Microsoft to detail the types of jobs that will be eliminated and how those cuts will affect the company’s H-1B workers.” Reader theodp adds, “On Friday, Microsoft coincidentally announced it would postpone construction of a planned 0 million data center in Grassley’s home state of Iowa, although work on data centers in Chicago and Dublin will continue.”

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