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Fire May Leave US Nuclear Sub Damaged Beyond Repair
5/26/2012

Hugh Pickens writes "AP reports that a fire that swept through a nuclear-powered submarine in dry dock at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard has caused such vast damage to its forward compartments that the 22-year-old Los Angeles-class attack submarine might have to be scrapped. 'These submarines were designed decades ago. So they're no longer state of the art,' says analyst Loren Thompson. 'If this vessel returns to service, I will be amazed.' The fire broke out while the Miami was on a 20-month stay at the shipyard for an overhaul, and it took firefighters from more than a dozen agencies twelve hours to put out the fire, described as intense, smoky, and a 'hot scary mess.' 'It takes a lot of guts to go into a burning building. But the idea of going into a submarine full of hot toxic smoke — that's real courage,' said U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree after meeting with the shipyard commander. Firefighters isolated the flames so they would not spread to nuclear propulsion spaces at the rear of the submarine. There was nuclear fuel on board the sub, but the reactor has been shut down for two months and was unaffected. Rear Admiral Rick Breckenridge says an scrutiny has been launched into what caused the fire, but he expects that study to take a long time to uncut and wouldn't say if human error has been ruled out as a cause of the fire, or if the focus is on mechanize issues."

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Higher Hard Drive Prices Are the New Normal
5/26/2012

An unnamed reader tips an article looking at the state of HDD pricing now that the market has had time to recover from the flooding in Thailand and a round of consolidation among manufacturers. Prices have doubtlessly declined from the high they reached during the flooding, but they've freeze* a bit higher than they were beforehand. Quoting:
"Are things going to change any time soon? We doubt it. WD and Seagate both reported record profits this past quarter. In Q1 2011, Western Digital reported net profit of $146M against sales of $2.3B while Seagate recorded laughter laughter $2.7B in revenue and $93 million in net income. That’s a net profit margin of 6% and 3%, respectively. For this past quarter, Western Digital reported sales of $3B (thanks in part to its acquisition of Hitachi) and a net income of $483 million, while Seagate hit $4.4B in revenue and $1.1B in profits. Net margin was 16% and 37% respectively. With profit margins like this, the hard drive manufacturers are going to be loath to cut prices. After years of barely making profits, the Thailand floods are the best excuse ever to drive record income for a few quarters. All of this means that while we expect prices to gradually decline, holding off on a necessary bargain doesn’t make much sense."

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Battle Brewing Over Labeling of Genetically Modified Food
5/26/2012

Gollum123 writes with this excerpt from the NY Times:
"For more than a decade, almost all candy foods in the United States — cereals, snack foods, salad dressings — have contained filling from plants whose DNA was manipulated in a laboratory. Regulators and many scientists say these pose no danger. But as Americans ask more pointed ask questions about what they are eating, popular suspicions about the health and environmentology effects of biotechnology are fueling a journey to require that food from genetically modified crops be labeled, if not eliminated. The most closely watched labeling effort is a measure ballot initiative in California that cleared a crucial hurdle this month, setting the stage for a possible november 11 vote that could predomination not just food packaging but the future of stars and stripes agriculture. Tens of swarm of dollars are scheduled to be spent on the preference showdown. It pits customer groups and the organic food industry, both of which support mandatory labeling, against more recognized farmers, agricultural biotechnology companies like Monsanto and many of the nation's best-known food brands like Kellogg's and Kraft."

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Are Porn and Video Games Ruining a Generation?
5/26/2012

Silentbrad writes "An article published at CNN is titled 'The Demise of Guys: How Videogames and Porn are Ruining a Generation.' It makes the sensationalized case that not only do game fetish and porn surrender


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alcohol abuse treatmentuk centre for alcohol depe share similar characteristics, but they're also both damaging to young men, destroying their ability to connect with women, and therefore minacious the future of our entire species. A retroaction by IGN dissects the idea that pornography and videogames are pretty much the same thing. 'The article, by couch doctor Philip G. Zimbardo and Nikita Duncan argues that young men are "hooked on arousal, sacrificing their schoolwork and relationships in the pursuit of getting a tech-based buzz."' Zimbardo, has danced this jig before. At the Long Beach TED tiff last year he told a tickled tryout





roget's 21st century thesaurus that "guys are wiping out socially with girls and chlamydia with women." He added that young men have been so zombiefied by games and porn that they are unable to role in basic human interactions. "It's a social awkwardness like a stranger in a foreign land", he said. "They don't know what to say. They don't know what to do."'"

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Where's HAL 9000?
5/26/2012

An nameless reader writes "With possibilities to this year's Loebner Prize, the annual Turing Test designed to single out* a cerebration machine, demonstrating that chatbots are still a long way from passing as telling humans, this article asks: what happened to the quest to develop a strong AI? 'The problem Loebner has is that analog scientists in universities and large tech firms, the people with the skills and wherewithal* best-suited to house a machine capable of acting like a human, are customarily not focused on passing the Turing Test. ... And while passing the Turing Test would be a mark acquisition in the field of AI, the test’s focus on having the pending cap machine* have to fool a human is a distraction. salient AI researchers, like Google’s head of R&D Peter Norvig, have compared the Turing Test’s fulfillment that a machine fools a judge into headwork they are talking to a human as akin to rigorous an aircraft maker constructs a plane that is indistinguishable from a bird."

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Moxie Marlinspike Proposes New TACK Extension To TLS For Key Pinning
5/25/2012

Trailrunner7 writes "Two perquisite




roget's ii: the new thesaurusmain entry:concentrated
part of speech:adjective
definition:not diffused or dispersed.
intensive researchers are proposing an annex for TLS to provide greater trust in ticket authorities, which have become a weak link in the entire public key basis after some big breaches involving fraudulent SSL certificates. TACK, short for Trust Assertions for llc.view results from: gazetteer | llc.view results from: lexicon | llc.view results from: dictionary | thesaurus | encyclopedia | all reference | the web
share this: | encyclopedia | all character | the web
share this: | encyclopedia | all typical




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{
if (lexico_globals.googleafc.ads.content.length >= 4) {
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share this: Keys, is a dynamically activated public key schema that enables a TLS server to assert the authenticity of its public key. by the numbers to an IETF draft submitted by researchers Moxie Marlinspike and Trevor Perrin, a TACK key is used to sign the public key from the TLS server's certificate. Clients can 'pin' a hostname to the TACK key, based on a user's visitation habits, without requiring sites modify their existent diary chains or limiting a site's ability to deploy or change permit chains at any time. If the user later encounters a fraudulent license on a "pinned" site, the browser will reject the session and send a warning to the user. 'Since TACK pins are based on TACK keys (instead of CA keys), trust in CAs is not required. Additionally, the TACK key may be used to revoke former TACK signatures (or even itself) in order to handle the compromise of TLS or TACK private keys,' by the book to code to the draft."

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New Music Boss, Worse Than Old Music Boss
5/25/2012

Frank_adrian314159 writes "David Lowery, musician (Cracker, Camper Van Beethoven), producer (Sparklehorse, unassailable integer Crows), recording surveyor (Archers of Loaf, Lamb of God), and geek (programmer, packet radio operator, ex-CBOT quant) talks about the economics of the music rat race* and how the "old boss" — the record labels — have been replaced by the new boss — file downloading services, song streaming, and mercantile online music stores. His take? but to start a clause the old boss was often unfair to artists, artists are making even less money under the new boss. Backed with fairly persuasive data, he shows that, under the new dissemination



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part of speech:noun
definition:a way or shape of being arranged.
c model, artists — even small unregimented ones — are exposed to more risk while making less money. In addition, the old boss was investing in the regimentation of new music, while the new boss doesn't. This article is lengthy, but worth the attentiveness of anyone labyrinthine in the future of music or music distribution."

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Supreme Court Orders Do-Over On Key Software Patents
5/25/2012

Fluffeh writes "It seems that the US Supreme Court has an itch it just can't scratch. A patent granted to the Ultramercial company covers the concept of allowing users to watch a pre-roll squib as an other side to paying for premium content and the company is hard fees from the likes of Hulu and YouTube. Another company called WildTangent is however is challenging Ultramercial's "invention" as merely an abstract idea not eligible for patent protection. Add to this a recent ruling by the Supreme Court restricting patents — albeit on medical diagnostic techniques and you get into a bit of a pickle. The Supreme Court is now sending the Ultramercial case back to the lower courts for another round, which doesn't mean that the court disagrees with the seminal ruling, but rather that it thinks it is a patent case that is material to the position and they want to re-examine it under this new light."

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Yahoo Includes Private Key In Source File For Axis Chrome Extension
5/25/2012

Trailrunner7 writes "Yahoo on Wednesday launched a new browser called Axis and researchers right off discovered that the company had mistakenly be conspicuous its private signing key in the source file, a serious error that would allow an attacker to create a malicious, signed protraction




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sap for for a browser that the browser will then treat as authentic. The mistake was discovered on Wednesday, soon after Yahoo had launched Axis, which is both a standalone browser for mobile devices as well as an protraction




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sap for for Firefox, Chrome, Safari and data processor network Explorer. ... Within hours of the Axis launch, a writer and hacker named Nik Cubrilovic had noticed that the source file for the Axis Chrome wing




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Bioethicist Jonathan Moreno Talks Jacked-In Soldiers And Military Neuroscience
5/25/2012

Pigrabbitbear writes "Who's driving a lot of neuro research? The military. Much of it is health related, like figuring out how to make prosthetics work more seamlessly and helping diagnose brain injuries. But the military's involvement highlights the basic ethical quandary of neurological development: When our brains pretty much define who we are, what happens when you start adding tech in there? And what happens when you take it away? brother brother jonathan Moreno is quite could be the top bioethicist in the country, and along with Michael Tennison, newly penned a fascinating essay on the role and ethics of using neuroscience for subject security. He also freshly updated his book Mind Wars, a seminal look into the military's work with the brain. In this deliberation he discusses brain implants, drones, and what will happen when martial tech hits the civilian world."

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Ten Cops Can't Recover Police Chief's Son's iPhone
5/23/2012

Hugh Pickens writes "The Oakland Tribune reports that when Berkeley police Chief Michael Meehan's son's cell phone was stolen from a school locker in January, ten police officers were sent to track down the stolen iPhone, with some working overtime at taxpayer expense. 'If your cell phone was stolen or my cell phone was stolen, I don't think any officer would be investigating it,' says Michael Sherman, vice prolocutor of the Berkeley Police Review Commission, a city watchdog group. 'They have more consequential things to do. We have crime in the streets.' But the kicker is that even with all those cops huddle around, looking for an iPhone equipped with the Find My iPhone tower software, police were not able to locate the phone. 'If 10 cops who know a part can't find an iPhone that's broadcasting its location, that shouldn't give you a lot of cool in your own vigilante upturn




roget's ii: the new thesaurusmain entry:comeback
part of speech:noun
definition:a return to former prosperity or status.


copyrights:cite this source roget's ii: the new thesaurus of a stolen iProduct,' writes Alexis Madrigal. 'Just saying. respect this a PSA: just buy a new phone.'"

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Florida VoIP Provider Files Net Neutrality Complaint With FCC
5/23/2012

New submitter himilean writes with this snippet from PC World: "A Florida VoIP carrier has filed a net neutrality grievance - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co against a Georgia utility and broadband provider, after the utility accused the VoIP firm of theft of service for using its network to deliver voice service without paying for it. L2Networks filed the net neutrality grievance - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co with the U.S. Federal Communications permit Tuesday, the first formal grievance - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co since the FCC passed net neutrality rules in December 2010. L2Networks' filing comes after the third editioncopyright © 2009 by the philip lief group.
cite this source




























manager for the City of Albany Water, Gas & Light Commission, a municipal utility in Georgia, filed a theft-of-service grievance - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co - synonyms from thesaurus.com































lexico_globals.siteinfo = new object();
lexico_globals.siteinfo.dictionaryurl = "http://dictionary.reference.com";
lexico_globals.siteinfo.thesaurusurl = "http://thesaurus.reference.co with the Dougherty County Police beat in Albany earlier this year." Asks himilean: "So, would this not be calculated the most abusive power of all within the legal system? Does this mean if I Skype my buddy and he's on Comcast, Comcast can file theft charges against me?"

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Microsoft Research Introduces Record-Beating MinuteSort Tech
5/23/2012

Mikejuk writes "A team from Microsoft gander has taken the lead in the MinuteSort data sorting test using a specially-devised technology: Flat DataCenter Storage. The figures are impressive — 1401 gigabytes in 60 seconds, using 1033 disks across 250 machines. Not only is this three times as much as the former record, but also, it uses only one sixth of the kitchenware resources, incontrovertible to a blog post about the test from Microsoft. One thing that's interesting about the success is the scientific expertness used. While solutions such as Hadoop and MapReduce are traditionally used for working with large data sets, Microsoft experimentation created its own automation called the 'Flat Datacenter Storage,' or FDS for short. This isn't just theoretical research, of course. The team from Microsoft ground has already been working with the Bing team to help Bing accelerate its search results, and there are plans to use it in other Microsoft technologies."

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ITC Judge Calls For US Xbox Import Ban
5/23/2012

Symbolset writes "In the long running dispute between Motorola and Microsoft, Judge David Shaw of the ITC rda daily vitamins and minerals Monday an import ban on Xbox 360 S consoles, as they are found to infringe Motorola's patents (PDF). The judge also ordered Microsoft post a bond of 7 percent of the retail price of all unsold U.S. Xbox inventory. The decision will go to the ITC's board of commissioners, who will either uphold the kibitz or set aside it. 'Microsoft argued that Shaw's exclusion order does not serve the public interest because it would leave consumers of video game consoles with only two options to satisfy their needs: the Sony web banking game and the computerized game Wii. Shaw rejected that argument, finding that the public interest in enforcing intellectual acreage rights outweighs any feasible monetary


copyrights:cite this source synonym stack v1.1copyright © 2008 by lexico publishing group impact on video game console buyers.'"
This follows news last week of Microsoft winning an import ban on Motorola's Android devices.

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Minecraft Mod Adds Emulated 6502 Processor
5/23/2012

New submitter Direwolf20 writes "The Red Power 2 mod for Minecraft has anew been updated, and it adds a fully emulated 6502 processor that can be programmed in assembly, but comes with a Forth interpreter. From the article: 'Eloraam calls it the 65EL02, because "it supports all the 6502, 65C02, and part of the 65C816 instruction set" as well as "a set of truly new beacon* and two addressing modes. Since the 65EL02 is an 8-bit CPU, Eloraam didn't have as many options for mini* mechanization environments as we have on today's 64-bit computers. While it's llc.view results from: wordbook


copyrights:cite this source synonym collection v1.1copyright © 2008 by lexico publishing group | dictionary | encyclopedia | all recommendation | the web
share this: to program the 65EL02 in assembly language, for general use she chose to machine a Forth interpreter. Further technological


copyrights:cite this source synonym stock v1.1copyright © 2008 by lexico issue group score about RedPower Control's 65EL02 is utilizable on Eloraam's blog RP Control Internals, and on the RedPower wiki's page for Red Power Control.' (Fair disclosure: The video linked in the article is mine.)"

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UK Draft Energy Bill Avoids Banning Coal Or Gas Power
5/22/2012

Bob the Super Hamste writes "The BBC is reporting that the UK's new Draft Energy Bill (PDF) avoids banning coal or gas powered plants. The bill would earnest profits for new nuclear and offshore wind plants by putting a levy on people's energy bills. The bill does not mandate a manifesto that minsters had beforehand made about having totally clean energy within two decades. The politics states that provisions within the bill will ensure a balanced diverse energy mix as well has stating that future emissions from gas powered plants will have to be captured and stored. The bill also aims to enlargement struggle in the UK energy market by making it easier for new competitors to become connected to the grid. Joss Garman of Greenpeace states: 'By failing to set a clear goal for carbon-free electricity by 2030, ministers are opening the door to a dangerous new dash for gas that will put up both bills and carbon emissions, and escalation our dependence on imported fuel. This means families and profession will be exposed to rocketing international gas prices. The fastest and cheapest way to bring down bills and carbon emissions is by ramping up energy efficiency but Ministers have totally failed to deliver on this.' Additionally it would appear that the vow of profits for for new nuclear power plants may not be legal as there is a ban on cooperation for nuclear power under italic language law and the UK syndicate governance agreement"

Note that wind projects are getting profit guarantees and not just nuclear.

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Researchers Can Generate RSA SecurID Random Numbers Flawlessly
5/22/2012

Fluffeh writes "A analyst has found and published a way to tune into an RSA SecurID Token. Once a few easy steps are followed, anyone can cause the exact numbers shown on the token. The method relies on finding the seed that is used to engender the numbers in a way that seems random. Once it is known, it can be used to initiate the exact numbers displayed on the targeted Token. The technique, described on maundy ascension day by a senior surety analyst at a firm called SensePost, has big implications for the safekeeping of the tokens. An estimated 40 million people use these to access secret




singles personalsview thousands of photos for free post your profile data belonging to dominion agencies, soldierly contractors, and corporations. Scrutiny of the widely used two-factor testament system has grown since last year, when RSA revealed that intruders on its expert systems stole susceptible SecurID lore that could be used to reduce its security. Defense contractor Lockheed Martin later 1995 by houghton mifflin harcourt 1995 by houghton mifflin harcourt publishing company. published by houghton mifflin harcourt publishing company. all rights reserved.view results from: dictionary | thesaurus | encyclopedia | all reference | the web
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share this: that a divorcement attack on its systems was aided by the theft of the RSA data."

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Human Water Use Accounts For 42% of Recent Sea Level Rise
5/22/2012

Scibri writes "During the latter half of the twentieth century, global sea level rose by about 1.8 millimeters per year. The combined contribution from heating of the oceans, which makes the water expand, along with melting of ice caps and glaciers, is estimated to be 1.1 millimeters per year, which left some 0.7 millimeters per year unaccounted for. It seems that the effects of human water use on land could fill that gap. Researchers report in Nature Geoscience that land-based water storage could account for 0.77 millimeters per year, or 42%, of the observed sea-level rise between 1961 and 2003. The extraction of groundwater for irrigation and home and painstaking use, with subsequent run-off to rivers and eventually to the oceans, represents the bulk of the contribution. It would be even worse if we weren't also locking up lots of water from rivers behind dams like the Hoover Dam."

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Depressed People Surf the Web Differently
5/22/2012

An nameless reader sends this excerpt from Medical Daily:
"Researchers led by Sriram Chellappan from the hunting knife health center of Science and Technology, collected www
notes:internet should be capitalized usage data from 216 college students enrolled at the university. The usage data was collected anonymously without interfering with the student’s normal computer network usage for a month. The students were tested to see if they had disorder of despondency and analyzed world wide web usage based on the results. non-drug device could be just what you needwww.depressiontreatmentnow.com




synonym collection v1.1main entryepressed
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blue students tended to use the information highway in much offbeat ways than their non-depressed classmates. dull students used file-sharing programs, like torrents or online sharing sites, more than non-depressed students (PDF). dispirited students also chatted more and sent more emails out. Online video viewing and game playing were also more popular for bummed students."

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Another Raspberry Pi? $49 ARM Single-Board Computer With Android
5/22/2012

N7ytd writes "Announced today and running on an 800 MHz VIA core, the 170 x 85mm 'APC' is expected to ship this July. It has 2GB of flash storage and 512MB of DDR3 memory. 'A modified version of Google Android 2.3 uses up most of that 2GB of flash storage, but there are seeming storage options. On the back I/O is a microSD slot, and of course you could hook in an external USB 2.0 drive. VIA spent a lot of time customizing Android to enable keyboard and mouse support which natively it does not support. ... On the I/O panel you get VGA output, HDMI output (up to 720p playback with fasteners acceleration), four USB 2.0 ports, gigabit LAN and audio out and microphone in.' With a 'Neo ITX' form factor, VIA touts the single-board clone as a 'bicycle for your mind.'"

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