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Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @03:00PM
from the yodelling-reveille dept.
Jack Herrington writes "For most companies, lightning never strikes. The promised miracle product fails, and the revolutionary dreams meet evolutionary reality. But for Apple, lightning struck twice: first with the Apple computer, which can be justifiably named the first personal computer, then with the Macintosh. Introduced with the groundbreaking 1984 commercial the Mac started the GUI revolution which brought millions of new users into the once inhospitable world of computing." Read on for Herrington's review of Revolution in the Valley.
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23 of 32 comments
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books.slashdot.org
) Science: The Coming Atlantic Mega-Tsunami |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @02:14PM
from the something-will-kill-you dept.
rbrander writes "It's not news at all that scientists predict an eventual "mega-tsunami" that will sweep across the Atlantic that will still be anything from 60 to 150 ft high when it hits the U.S. Eastern seaboard. This Old News, however, suddenly seems fresh. Like an asteroid hit, it could be millenia away, or tomorrow, that a volcano in the Canary Islands just off Africa drops half a trillion tons of rock into the Atlantic.
A short description of the problem from BBC News and some more graphic descriptions (of up to 100 million dead) and shrewd commentary on the politics of warning from journalist Gwynne Dyer."
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298 of 422 comments
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science.slashdot.org
) Science: Relic Russian ICBM To the Rescue for Science |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @01:31PM
from the swords-into-satellites dept.
helio writes "Japanese space agency, JAXA, has announced that the agency will use DNEPR space launch system to launch OICETS (Optical Inter-Orbit Communications Engineering Test Satellite). Initially OICETS was to be launched with Japan's H-IIA rocket, however the delay in their development and a lack of time in the schedule force JAXA to utilize Russian's DNEPR system. For those who are too young to remember Cold War, DNEPR space launch system used to be Russian's inter-continental ballistic missiles (ICBM). As you may guess, the OICETS satellite will be launched from a silo."
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73 of 89 comments
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science.slashdot.org
) Comparative CPU Benchmarks From 1995 to 2004 |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @12:42PM
from the difference-engine dept.
Lux writes "The guys over at Tom's Hardware Guide have been busy recently! They've compared over a hundred different architectures dating all the way back to the Pentium 1 in one huge benchmarking effort. Looking to upgrade an older system? Unlike most benchmarks, which compare modern systems to other modern systems, these charts can help you figure out if the cost of upgrading is worth the speedup or if you should hold off for a bit longer."
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165 of 214 comments
) IT: Computer Viruses Broke 100,000 In 2004 |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @12:00PM
from the research-purposes-of-course dept.
Sammy at Palm Addict writes "The count of known computer viruses broke the 100,000 barrier in 2004 and the number of new viruses grew by more than 50% according to news from the BBC. The BBC also reports that 'phishing attempts, in which conmen try to trick people into handing over confidential data, are recording growth rates of more than 30% with attacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated.'"
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128 of 170 comments
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it.slashdot.org
) Science: Creative Commons For Science |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @11:12AM
from the piper-payers-ask-to-call-tune dept.
chrisspurgeon writes "The folks at Creative Commons are rolling out a new project aimed at improving the dissemination of scientific publications and data. The National Institutes of Health is already proposing mandated Open Access to all NIH-funded research, and many scientists welcome the free redistribution of their papers, they just don't know the legal details of how to do it. The Science Commons project will take on the copyright problems unique to scientists (things like pre and post prints, and electronic vs. paper journal distribution)."
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62 of 80 comments
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science.slashdot.org
) Windows Media Center Edition vs. The World |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @10:19AM
from the no-compelling-advantage dept.
sam_christ writes "An article in today's Investor's Business Daily (Google cache) and an article by TV industry pundit/predictions-huckster Philip Swann say the same thing: that Microsoft's Media Center Edition will be a big flop in 2005. Meanwhile, from what I can tell much more powerful alternatives to Microsoft's MCE bloatware are thriving: commercial products like Snapstream (see their 6-tuner Medusa PVR built for about $1200), Showshifter and open-source freeware like Mediaportal and MythTV. From what I've read about Microsoft MCE and all of its DRM and content restrictions, I have to agree with both of these articles."
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254 of 333 comments
) Science: Quake Changes Earth's Rotation, Moves Islands |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @09:29AM
from the shorter-or-maybe-longer-who-knows dept.
kernel panic attack writes "This week's deadly Asian Quake and Tsunami may have been so powerful,
that it changed the rate of Earth's rotation. In a Reuters article,
a NASA geophysicist theorizes that the quake compacted the Earth enough
to speed up the planet's rotation by 3 microseconds. A second
article
says the quake moved undersea tectonic plates by up to 98 feet, shifting
islands near Sumatra out to sea an unknown distance. Also, a
USGS team wants images from commercial satellite operators to
help pinpoint coastline damage. Lastly, an interesting article from the Australian Spaceguard Survey about the need for a Tsunami warning system in the Indian Ocean. The author comments that tsunami warnings may not help much, as people often flock to the coastline to see the giant waves." The current estimated death toll is now nearly 70,000; Amazon and Google, among others, have added front-page links to simplify donating to the disaster relief effort.
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505 of 680 comments
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science.slashdot.org
) IT: Microsoft Compares Windows And Linux |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @08:46AM
from the horses-for-courses dept.
Halcyon-X writes "Microsoft is hosting a discussion on Windows and Linux between its two top Linux consultants. Martin Taylor and Bill Hilf talk about the various OSS licenses, focus on the open source development model, competing implementations of administration tools, TCO, and risk assessment. Also available in offline formats, doc (which looks fine in OpenOffice.org) and wma as well."
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232 of 317 comments
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it.slashdot.org
) Apple: Think Secret Predicts Sub-$500 Headless Mac |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @08:03AM
from the wouldn't-it-be-nice dept.
eadint writes "I have just read an article posted on Think Secret that discusses a
confirmed $499
Apple box sans monitor. According to the article, this has been
under development for almost one year and may be available towards the
end of 2005Q1. The system is rumored to be based on a G4 with 256MB
of RAM , 40-80GB HD with a combo drive (sorry, no SuperDrive). Although Apple has stated in the past that they have no motivation to
compete in the sub-$600 PC market, this system was based on polls showing that more people would buy it after initial exposure
to the iPod." "Confirmed" seems a strong word, but I hope this is more than wishful thinking.
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478 of 606 comments
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apple.slashdot.org
) High-Speed Video Using a Dense Camera Array |
Posted by
michael
on Wednesday December 29, @06:20AM
from the e-pluribus-unum dept.
karvind writes "Researchers at Stanford have demonstrated multi-thousand frame-per-second (fps) video using a dense array of cheap 30fps CMOS image sensors. A benefit of using a camera array to capture high speed video is that we can scale to higher speeds by simply adding more cameras. Even at extremely high frame rates, our array architecture supports continuous streaming to disk from all of the cameras. Now we know where to use 100TB tape drives and what to expect in the next sci-fi movie."
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73 of 96 comments
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Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @04:11AM
from the cajoling-and-threats dept.
Nigel Cross wrote in with an interesting story from the world of software fraud. Cross writes "I found a copycat site fraudulently selling my own software and kept a record of the steps it took to bring him down."
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234 of 373 comments
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yro.slashdot.org
) IT: Holland Bans AMD's 'Virus Protection' Campaign |
Posted by
timothy
on Wednesday December 29, @01:02AM
from the puffery-is-strictly-for-cafes dept.
Hack Jandy writes "For those of you who didn't see this coming, AMD's Advanced Virus Protection campaign has been banned in Holland since the technology does (almost) nothing to stop viruses! If you recall, AMD's NX bit attempts to stop the processor from executing pages on the stack that have been written to. Does NX even solve more problems than it causes?"
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174 of 279 comments
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it.slashdot.org
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