A Hands-on Preview with GTA 4 DLC: The Lost and the Damned
A first look into new content from Rockstar’s Grand Theft Auto 4, featuring new music, weapons (auto-shotgun, grenade launcher, pipe bombs), characters, television programming, Internet, and minigames, as well as new multiplayer modes and “superpeds”. Motorcycles have also been tweaked so that they’re much easier to ride and harder to fall off of.
Overcoming Information Overload
Daniel Tammet: “Our world is generating more information with more resources and technology now than at any time in history: through TV and radio programs, cell phones, magazines, email, websites, blogs, and other media… Being overwhelmed by a continuous maelstrom of information can be just as damaging to our minds as having too little of it…”
Washington Post: Japan Works to Help Immigrants Find Jobs
The last thing that aging Japan can afford to lose is young people. Yet as the global economic crisis flattens demand for Japanese cars and electronic goods, thousands of youthful, foreign-born factory workers are getting fired, pulling their children out of school and flying back to where they came from. Alarmed, new programs are in place to help.
Building a Better CAPTCHA
jcatcw writes “Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols reports that CAPTCHA cracking isn’t that difficult these days. It has even become a business. For example, DeCaptcher.com will solve CAPTCHAs for your spamming needs at a rate of per 1,000 successfully cracked CAPTCHAs. In response, newer systems are in development. Both Carnegie Mellon and Penn State (is there something about the water in PA?) are working on image-based systems. ESP-PIX and SQ-PIX both require the viewer to interpret pictures. Imagination CAPTCHA from Penn has the user find the center of an image. The idea is that humans are better at image recognition that computers, but humans can legitimately disagree on their interpretations and some humans are color blind. Problems remain. For now, sites would be well advised to look at reCAPTCHA — the system that works with Google Books and the Internet Archive to digitize printed texts — which comes with a wide variety of application and programming plug-ins and an open API.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Obama Sides With Bush In Spy Case
palegray.net is one of many who writes “President Obama has publicly sided with the Bush administration on the question of whether the President should be allowed to establish warrantless wiretapping programs designed to monitor US citizens. The President has asked a federal judge to stay a ruling that would allow key evidence into the domestic spying case against the government. ‘Thursday’s filing by the Obama administration marked the first time it officially lodged a court document in the lawsuit asking the courts to rule on the constitutionality of the Bush administration’s warrantless-eavesdropping program.'” jamie points out that Obama’s views and opinions were made clear through his Senate vote and numerous public statements, but many others see this as a disappointing start to an administration promising transparency and openness.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
2009 is your year to reach for the stars – Calgary Herald
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2009 is your year to reach for the stars
Calgary Herald – 20 hours ago In 1609, Galileo Galilei first looked through an astronomical telescope at the heavens and began to seriously question his place in the universe. SCIENCE NORTH CELEBRATES YEAR OF ASTRONOMY WITH STAR PARTIES … Lake Superior News Gettysburg professor presents program on Galileo at Renfrew Gettysburg Times all 5 news articles |
Survey Says C Dominated New ’08 Open-Source Projects
svonkie writes “C overwhelmingly proved to be the most popular programming language for thousands of new open-source projects in 2008, reports The Register (UK). According to license tracker Black Duck Software, which monitors 180,000 projects on nearly 4,000 sites, almost half — 47 per cent — of new projects last year used C. 17,000 new open-source projects were created in total. Next in popularity after C came Java, with 28 per cent. In scripting, JavaScript came out on top with 20 per cent, followed by Perl with 18 per cent. PHP attracted just 11 per cent, and Ruby six per cent. The numbers are a surprise, as open-source PHP has proved popular as a web-site development language, while Ruby’s been a hot topic for many.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Elgato Releases EyeTV 3.1 Update – O’Grady’s Power Page
O'Grady's Power Page |
Elgato Releases EyeTV 3.1 Update
O’Grady’s Power Page – 21 Jan 2009 Late Sunday, Elgato Systems released version 3.1 of its EyeTV software application, which finds and tracks all television programming you want to see and allows users to pause live television and save content to file. Elgato updates up EyeTV to 3.1 Macworld UK all 6 news articles |
Gettysburg professor presents program on Galileo at Renfrew – Gettysburg Times
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Gettysburg professor presents program on Galileo at Renfrew
Gettysburg Times – 21 Jan 2009 The public is invited to learn about the “new universe” discovered by Galileo four centuries ago in a program scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 22 at 7 pm at the Visitors Center at Renfrew Park in Waynesboro. SCIENCE NORTH CELEBRATES Lake Superior News all 5 news articles |