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  Science: Resurrecting the Mighty Mammoth, Cheaply 2008-11-20 18:34

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @06:34PM
from the when-faster-and-cheaper-are-synonymous dept.
Biotech
somanyrobots writes with an interesting followup in the New York Times to the earlier-reported substantial reconstruction of the woolly mammoth genome: "Scientists are talking for the first time about the old idea of resurrecting extinct species as if this staple of science fiction is a realistic possibility, saying that a living mammoth could perhaps be regenerated for as little as $10 million. The same technology could be applied to any other extinct species from which one can obtain hair, horn, hooves, fur or feathers, and which went extinct within the last 60,000 years, the effective age limit for DNA." (The Washington Post article linked from the earlier post was much more skeptical, calling such an attempt "still firmly the domain of science fiction." The New York Times article, while describing the process in similar terms, also calls attention to recent advances in sequencing DNA, as well as recoding DNA for cloning.)
science biotech dodo jurassicpark jurassicbabar
science biotech
Read More 18 comments
Comments: 18
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  Technology: Unix Dict/grep Fixes Left-Side-of-Keyboard Puzzle 2008-11-20 17:40

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @05:40PM
from the mysteries-of-the-ages dept.
Unix
destinyland writes "For decades, people have been asking this brain teaser: 'What's the longest word you can type with only the left-hand letters on a keyboard?' The answer is supposed to be 'stewardesses,' but grepping the standard dictionary that ships with Unix reveals a much better answer. There's nearly 2,000 shorter words that can typed with only the left hand — including one word that's even longer. (The article also quotes a failed novel attempt using nothing but words typed on the keyboard's left side.)"
humor unix idle devertebrated tech
tech unix
Read More 109 comments
Comments: 109
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  News: Zapping Contrails With Microwave Emitters 2008-11-20 17:12

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @05:12PM
from the set-it-for-beverage dept.
Earth
An anonymous reader writes "Dissipation of contrails with a powerful microwave beam aligned behind aircraft engines is being touted as a possible solution to help address air transport's effects on the climate. 'The remote heating of condensation nuclei could be achieved by applying electromagnetic radiation, such as microwaves,' says Cranfield University's Frank Noppel. 'Depending on assumptions made, calculation shows that the power required for such a device could be as little as 0.1% of the engine power.'"
technology transportation earth roastbird chemtrails
news earth
Read More 54 comments
Comments: 54
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  Technology: Kaminsky Bug Options Include "Do Nothing," Says IETF 2008-11-20 16:46

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @04:46PM
from the doing-stuff-is-overrated dept.
Security
netbuzz writes "Meeting in Minneapolis this week, the Internet engineering community is debating whether to aggressively fashion and apply fixes for the so-called Kaminsky bug in the DNS discovered this summer, or to simply let its threat stand as motivation for all to move with greater speed toward DNSSEC, which is considered the best long-term security solution. Problem with the latter approach is that DNSSEC has been in the works for a decade already, no one is confident it will be universally embraced, and the Kaminsky flaw is causing real problems today.
internet security it bug dns
tech security
Read More 38 comments
Comments: 38
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Screenshot-sm   Idle: Woman Unable To Recognize Voices, Unless It's Sean Connery 2008-11-20 16:31

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday November 20, @04:31PM
from the I'll-take-the-penis-mightier-for-$200-trebek dept.
Image
A 60-year-old British woman is suffering from a neurological defect that is sure to put her in the next version of "The Man who Mistook His Wife for a Hat." She is unable to recognize any voice she hears — any voice, that is, but Sean Connery's. Unless she sees the face of the person speaking, she has no idea who is talking to her, even her daughter and co-worker's voices are unrecognizable. Dr. Brad Duchaine at University College London, thinks she might have the first documented case of vocal prosopagnosia, a condition which makes it extremely difficult for people to recognize faces. "His accent is distinctive," Duchaine explained. "And she is a British woman in her sixties ... let's say it's probable he got her attention."
science zardoz
idle science
Read More 29 comments
Comments: 29
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  Science: Scientists Grow New Eyes (In Tadpoles) 2008-11-20 16:16

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @04:16PM
from the good-place-to-start dept.
Biotech
MagnetDroid writes "Michael Zuber and his colleagues from SUNY Upstate Medical University have shown how to regrow frogs eyes using stem cells. Zuber's team genetically engineered the stem cells to express transcription factors that regulate eye development and, when they transplanted them into frog embryos that had had one eye removed, they regrew into fully functioning tadpole eyes. Unfortunately, the same trick doesn't work in mammals but Zuber hopes to find chemicals that activate the transcription factors without genetic engineering and says this might one day lead to new treatments for diseases linked to cell loss in the retina."
biotech science nothxtobush tadpoleabuse thirdeye
science biotech
Read More 30 comments
Comments: 30
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  Science: Search For the Tomb of Copernicus Reaches an End 2008-11-20 16:00

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @04:00PM
from the always-the-last-place-you-look dept.
Earth
duh P3rf3ss3r writes "The Associated Press reports that, after 200 years of speculation and investigation, the tomb of Nicolaus Copernicus has been found. Although the heliocentric concept had been suggested earlier, Copernicus is widely thought of as the father of the scientific theory of the heliocentric solar system. The positive identification was made by comparing the DNA from a skeleton's teeth with that from hairs in a book known to have belonged to Copernicus. A computer-generated facial reconstruction is said to also bear a resemblance to contemporary portraits of the scientist."
space science earth dna astronomy
science earth
Read More 130 comments
Comments: 130
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  Your Rights Online: Apple DMCAs iPodHash Project 2008-11-20 15:18

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @03:18PM
from the if-google-is-a-verb dept.
Media (Apple)
TRS-80 writes "Apple has sent a DMCA takedown notice to the IpodHash project, claiming it circumvents their FairPlay DRM scheme. Some background: Apple first added a hash to the iTunesDB file in 6th-gen iPods, but it was quickly reverse-engineered. They changed it with the release of iPhone 2.0 and a project was started to reverse the new hash, but weren't successful yet. My guess is Apple used the same algorithm as FairPlay for the new hash, so Apple could use the DMCA to prevent competing apps like Songbird and Banshee from talking to iPods/iPhones. BTW, don't tell Apple, but the project uses a wiki, so the old page versions from before the takedown are still there."
apple media outbreakofstupidity dmca yro
yro media
Read More 249 comments
Comments: 249
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  Hardware: AMD Shows Upcoming Phenom II CPU At 6.0 GHz+ 2008-11-20 14:50

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @02:50PM
from the calm-down-there-cowpoke dept.
AMD
Vigile writes "Today during a press briefing at AMD's offices in Austin, TX the company showed off some upcoming technology that should be available sometime early in 2009. What was most impressive was the overclocked speeds of the pending Phenom II X4 45nm processors. On air cooling AMD showed the quad-core CPU running at nearly 4.0 GHz while with much more extreme liquid nitrogen cooling help the same CPU reached over 6.0 GHz! It looks like AMD's newest processor might finally once again compete with the best from Intel, including its recent Core i7 CPUs."
hardware amd hardhack haters duh
hardware amd
Read More 86 comments
Comments: 86
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  Technology: Network Neutrality — Without Regulation 2008-11-20 14:32

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @02:32PM
from the but-that's-unpossible dept.
The Internet
boyko.at.netqos writes "Timothy B. Lee (no relation to Tim Berners-Lee), a frequent contributor to Ars Technica and Techdirt, has recently written 'The Durable Internet,' a paper published by the libertarian-leaning CATO institute. In it, Lee argues that because a neutral network works better than a non-neutral one, the Internet's open-ended architecture is not likely to vanish, despite the fears of net neutrality proponents, (and despite the wishes of net neutrality opponents.) For that reason, perhaps network neutrality legislation isn't necessary — or even desirable — from an open-networks perspective. In addition to the paper, Network Performance Daily has an interview and podcast with Tim Lee, and Lee addresses counter-arguments with a blog posting for Technology Liberation Front."
internet astroturfing naive cato wishfulthinking
tech internet
Read More 199 comments
Comments: 199
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  News: Lessig, Zittrain, Barlow To Square Off Against RIAA 2008-11-20 13:47

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 20, @01:47PM
from the ensemble-cast dept.
The Courts
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The RIAA's case in Boston against a 24-year-old grad student, SONY BMG Music v. Tenenbaum, in which Prof. Charles Nesson of Harvard Law School, along with members of his CyberLaw class, are representing the defendant, may shape up as a showdown between the Electronic Frontier and Big Music. The defendant's witness list includes names such as those of Prof. Lawrence Lessig (Author of 'Free Culture'), John Perry Barlow (former songwriter of The Grateful Dead and cofounder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation), Prof. Johan Pouwelse (Scientific Director of P2P-Next), Prof. Jonathan Zittrain (Author of 'The Future of the Internet — And How to Stop It'), Professors Wendy Seltzer, Terry Fisher, and John Palfrey, and others. The RIAA requested, and was granted, an adjournment of the trial, from its previously scheduled December 1st date, to March 30, 2009. (The RIAA lawyers have been asking for adjournments a lot lately, asking for an adjournment in UMG v. Lindor the other day because they were so busy preparing for the Tenenbaum December 1st trial ... I guess when you're running on hot air, you sometimes run out of steam)."
court music riaa dreamteam ftw
news court
Read More 187 comments
Comments: 187
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  Games: Study Recommends Online Gaming, Social Networking For Kids 2008-11-20 13:02

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday November 20, @01:02PM
from the seeing-the-writing-on-the-wall dept.
Social Networks
Blue's News pointed out a report about a study sponsored by the MacArthur Foundation which found that online gaming and social networking are beneficial to children, teaching them basic technical skills and how to communicate in the Information Age. The study was conducted over a period of three years, with researchers interviewing hundreds of children and monitoring thousands of hours of online time. The full white paper (PDF) is also available. "For a minority of children, the casual use of social media served as a springboard to them gaining technological expertise — labeled in the study as 'geeking out,' the researchers said. By asking friends or getting help from people met through online groups, some children learned to adjust the software code underpinning some of the video games they played, edit videos and fix computer hardware. Given that the use of social media serves as inspiration to learning, schools should abandon their hostility and support children when they want to learn some skills more sophisticated than simply designing their Facebook page, the study said."
social games gooutside suddenoutbreakofcommonsense thinkofthechildren
games social
Read More 124 comments
Comments: 124
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  Technology: CRTC Rules Bell Can Squeeze Downloads 2008-11-20 12:21

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday November 20, @12:21PM
from the throttle-away dept.
The Internet
pparsons writes "Bell Canada Inc. will not have to suspend its practice of 'shaping' traffic on the Internet after a group of companies that resell access to Bell's network complained their customers were also being negatively affected. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission today released a decision that denied the Canadian Association of Internet Providers' request that Bell be ordered to cease its application of the practice to its wholesale customers."
canada lawsuit internet bellcanada crtc
tech internet
Read More 204 comments
Comments: 204
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  Science: MIT and NASA Designing Silent Aircraft 2008-11-20 11:42

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday November 20, @11:42AM
from the Fly-the-silent-skies dept.
Transportation
Iddo Genuth writes "Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics recently won a contract from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to design quieter, more energy efficient, and more environmentally friendly commercial airplanes. The two-million-dollar contract from NASA is just an initial step in bringing green technologies to the sky."
nasa transportation technology science !loud
science transportation
Read More 148 comments
Comments: 148
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  Science: Spider Missing After Trip To Space Station 2008-11-20 10:56

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday November 20, @10:56AM
from the lost-in-space dept.
Space
Garabito writes "A spider that had been sent to the International Space Station for a school science program was lost. Two arachnids were sent in order to know if spiders can survive and make webs in space, but now only one spider can be seen in the container. NASA isn't sure where the other spider could have gone. I, for one, welcome our new arachnid overlords."
space nomnomnom science idle spiderman
science space
Read More 406 comments
Comments: 406
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  Technology: Studios Sue Oz ISP Over Allowing Piracy 2008-11-20 10:10

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday November 20, @10:10AM
from the you-can't-make-this-up dept.
The Internet
Da Massive writes "Leading Hollywood film studios Village Roadshow, Universal Pictures, Warner Bros Entertainment, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation and Disney Enterprises are suing Australia's second largest ISP, iiNet, saying it's complicit in the infringement of their copyrighted material. According to a statement of claim, 'the ISP knows that there are a large number of customers who are engaging in continuing infringements of copyright by using BitTorrent file sharing technology.'"
internet mafiaa bastards australia greed
tech internet
Read More 304 comments
Comments: 304
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  Technology: Google Terminates Lively 2008-11-20 09:33

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday November 20, @09:33AM
from the we-hardly-knew-ye dept.
Google
FornaxChemica writes "In a surprise move, Google announced today, both on-site and in its blog, that it will permanently shut down its 3D virtual world, Lively, by the end of the year. This makes Lively one of Google's few scrapped products, and one of the most short-lived, too, barely lasting 6 months. No official reason was given, only that Google wants to 'prioritize [its] resources and focus more on [its] core search, ads and apps business.' Lively might have taken too much and given back too little, even by Google's standards."
google lively !surprise deadely sucks
tech google
Read More 159 comments
Comments: 159
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  Technology: IRS Looking at Google/Mozilla Relationship 2008-11-20 08:45

Posted by CmdrTaco on Thursday November 20, @08:45AM
from the can't-imagine-why dept.
Mozilla
ric482 writes "With the release of the Mozilla Foundation's 2007 financial report, questions have been raised by the IRS, who are due to perform an audit on the non-profit organization behind the massively popular Firefox browser. Last year, the Foundation received $66 million of its total $75 million revenue (88 percent) from search engine maestros Google, so the IRS are looking for blood over the organization's tax exempt status. Back in 2006, Mozilla got $59.5 million from Google — around 85 percent of the organization's revenue. Google and Mozilla are part of a 'you scratch my back, I'll pay your bills' sort of agreement, with the Google search bar firmly placed in the toolbar, and on the default homepage. Things were a bit rocky a couple of months back when Google unveiled the Beta-run of its Chrome browser, but Mozilla and Google hugged it out and sealed a deal that will last for another three years. That deal will expire in November 2011."
google money mozilla government irs
tech mozilla
Read More 225 comments
Comments: 225
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  Science: Most of Woolly Mammoth Genome Reconstructed 2008-11-20 07:57

Posted by samzenpus on Thursday November 20, @07:57AM
from the I-want-a-cave-bear dept.
Biotech
geekmansworld writes "From the Washington Post, 'An international team of scientists has reconstructed more than three-quarters of the genome of the woolly mammoth using DNA extracted from balls of hair, the first time this has been accomplished for an extinct species.' Who wants a pet mammoth?"
biotech science jurassicpark clevergirl dna
science biotech
Read More 222 comments
Comments: 222
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  Games: New Xbox Experience Goes Live 2008-11-20 03:30

Posted by Soulskill on Thursday November 20, @03:30AM
from the quick-get-some-of-those-mii-things dept.
XBox (Games)
Today, Microsoft launched the New Xbox Experience for Xbox Live. The list of new features includes the streaming of TV shows and movies through Netflix, the ability to install games to the HDD, an avatar system, and the Community Games platform. The launch itself was shaky at first, but most issues have been smoothed out. Sony-owned Columbia Pictures immediately pulled their movie selection, though it may return when a licensing deal gets worked out. Halo 3 developer Bungie pointed out that not all games will run faster when installed to a HDD because of the way the games already interact with the drive.
netflix microsoft xbox nxe games
games xbox
Read More 296 comments
Comments: 296

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