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LAST NEWS
| Lt. col. john bircher answers your questions A few weeks ago, you asked questions of Lt. Col. John Bircher, head of an organization with a difficult-to-navigate name: the U.S. Army Computer Network Operations (CNO)-Electronic Warfare (EW) Proponent's Futures Branch. Lt. Col. Bircher has answered from his perspective, at length, not just the usual 10 questions, but several more besides. Read on for his take on cyberwar, jurisdiction, ethics, and more. Lt. col. john bircher answers your questions
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| Researchers demo flippable-page e-book reader holy_calamity writes "E-readers are getting better but still limit users to keyboard-style interaction. Researchers at Berkeley and Maryland Universities have changed that with a reader that has two 'pages.' The two displays can be moved like a real book's pages to leaf through a document, or detached to compare and share virtual pages. If they are folded back to create a tablet with displays on each side, you can turn it over to flip pages. A video shows it in action." You may be reminded of the promised second-generation OLPC device, which looks somewhat similar. Researchers demo flippable-page e-book reader
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| Wikipedia's content ripped off more egregiously than usual Ultraexactzz writes "Wikipedia's content is licensed under the GFDL, which permits such content to be copied with attribution — and Wikipedia is used to its content being copied and mirrored. However, a new website at e-wikipedia.net appears to have taken this a step further by mirroring the entire English Wikipedia — articles, logos, disclaimers, userpages, and all. Compare Wikipedia's About page with e-wikipedia.net's. The site even adds to Wikipedia's normally ad-free interface by including text ads." Just try logging in or actually editing an article, though, and you'll get the message "The requested URL /w/index.php was not found on this server. Additionally, a 404 Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request." If there's credit here, I don't see it — sure looks like it's intentionally misleading readers. Wikipedia's content ripped off more egregiously than usual
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| Deconstructing game review structure Recently there has been a lot of division on the topic of game review structure. Kotaku has an interesting summary of recent commentary, including a piece by GameSetWatch's Simon Parkin and the Taipei Gamer blog. "Except, of course, video games don't work in the same way as toasters or digital cameras. Sure, they have mathematical elements and measurable mechanics and it's possible to compare the number of polygons between this one and that and spin out ten thousand graphs detailing how two specimens compare. But, unlike with the Canon EOS400D, I would have no idea at the end of those 25 pages which game was better or where they would sit on the 'true' scale of quality." Deconstructing game review structure
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| '90s dot-coms — where are they now? An anonymous reader writes "The Industry Standard has put together a list of 10 dot-com stars from the Internet bubble of the late 1990s, and tracked down what happened to the services and their founders. A lot of the services are still around, albeit under new ownership, including eToys, Garden.com, and DrKoop.com. Others have been completely reinvented — Boo.com, an online clothing retailer that burned through $125 million in funding in the late 1990s, is now an online travel community. Of the founders, many were able to cash out early and/or achieve later online success. Excite's Joe Kraus and Graham Spencer later started JotSpot, which was bought by Google, and Kraus now directs work on Google's OpenSocial initiative. Others did not fare as well, such as two of the co-founders of Garden.com, who declined to cash out at the height of the bubble, and are currently 'between business ventures.' The insiders' post-mortems of the failed dot-coms are interesting — several suggest the concepts were good but too early for their time, while others identify specific factors that led to the failures — ranging from a lack of advertising to 'intense' greed." '90s dot-coms — where are they now?
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| Canadian isp ordered to prove traffic-shaping is needed Sepiraph writes "In a letter sent to the Canadian Association of Internet Providers and Bell Canada on May 15, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) have ordered Bell Canada to provide tangible evidence that its broadband networks are congested to justify the company's Internet traffic-shaping policies. This is a response after Bell planned to tackle the issue of traffic shaping, also called throttling, on the company's broadband networks. It would be interesting to see Bell's response, as well as to see some real-world actual numbers and compare them to a previous study." Canadian isp ordered to prove traffic-shaping is needed
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| 2008 international broadband rankings itif writes to let us know about a major new report, released yesterday by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, showing how the US and other countries compare in terms of broadband access, speed, and price. The rankings (PDF) place the US 15th, this country having fallen every year since 2001. Here's the full report (PDF). According to the report's executive summary: "The US broadband policy environment is characterized on the one hand by market fundamentalists who see little or no role for government, and see government as the problem; and on the other by digital populists who favor a vastly expanded role for government (including government ownership of networks and strict and comprehensive regulation, including mandatory unbundling of incumbent networks and strict net neutrality regulations) and who see big corporations providing broadband as a problem. Given the policy advocacy and advice they are getting, it is no wonder that Congress and the Administration have done so little." 2008 international broadband rankings
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| Google visualrank for image search Google researchers are claiming that a newly developed approach to visual search may do for image searching what PageRank did for text search. "The research paper, 'PageRank for Product Image Search,' is focused on a subset of the images that the giant search engine has cataloged because of the tremendous computing costs required to analyze and compare digital images. To do this for all of the images indexed by the search engine would be impractical, the researchers said. Google does not disclose how many images it has cataloged, but it asserts that its Google Image Search is the 'most comprehensive image search on the Web.'" Google visualrank for image search
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| Office 2007 fails ooxml test with 122,000 errors I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Groklaw is reporting that some people have decided to compare the OOXML schema to actual Microsoft Office 2007 documents. It won't surprise you to know that Office 2007 failed miserably. If you go by the strict OOXML schema, you get a 17 MiB file containing approximately 122,000 errors, and 'somewhat less' with the transitional OOXML schema. Most of the problems reportedly relate to the serialization/deserialization code. How many other fast-tracked ISO standards have no conforming implementations?" Office 2007 fails ooxml test with 122,000 errors
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| Monsanto's harvest of fear Cognitive Dissident writes "Intellectual property thuggery is not restricted to the IT and entertainment industries. The May 2008 edition of Vanity Fair carries a major feature article on the mafiaa-like tactics of Monsanto in its pursuit of total domination of various facets of agribusiness. First in GM seeds with its 'Roundup Ready' crops designed to sell more of its Roundup herbicide, and more recently in milk production with rBGH designed to squeeze more milk out of individual cows, Monsanto has been resorting to increasingly over-the-top tactics to prevent what it sees as infringement or misrepresentation of its biotechnology. As with other forms of IP tyranny, the point is not really to help the public but to consolidate corporate power. Quotes: 'Some compare Monsanto's hard-line approach to Microsoft's zealous efforts to protect its software from pirates. At least with Microsoft the buyer of a program can use it over and over again. But farmers who buy Monsanto's seeds can't even do that.' and '"I don't know of a company that chooses to sue its own customer base," says Joseph Mendelson, of the Center for Food Safety. "It's a very bizarre business strategy." But it's one that Monsanto manages to get away with, because increasingly it's the dominant vendor in town.' Sound familiar?" Monsanto's harvest of fear
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| Farecompare travel deals Spend autumn in Germany with the help of Lufthansa . You still have a few days left to take advantage of Lufthansa’s fall deals to Europe. You’ll find cheap flights to cities ... Farecompare travel deals
Sat, 28 Jun 2008 13:00:00 GMT,
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| Farecompare travel deals » about The Deals blog is updated daily–or several times a day–whatever it takes to bring you the best travel deals FareCompare.com ’s proprietary airfare processing system can find. Farecompare travel deals » about
Sun, 22 Jun 2008 20:03:00 GMT,
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| Discount airfare, cheap flights, helping you find cheap tickets at ... FareCompare LP 18111 Preston Road, Suite 800 Dallas, TX 75252 ... For Technical Support, Customer Service Or General Inquiries Discount airfare, cheap flights, helping you find cheap tickets at ...
Wed, 25 Jun 2008 08:18:00 GMT,
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| Insider tips, air travel articles, airline & airfare information ... Go ahead, ask FareCompare's CEO anything, and we mean anything. Destinations. Cool stuff about your favorite city you'll never hear anywhere else Insider tips, air travel articles, airline & airfare information ...
Sat, 28 Jun 2008 21:36:00 GMT,
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| Travel tips/top 10 lists I am about to tell you about an easy-to-use FareCompare technology tool that will help you save plenty. It’s a little trick I want to share that makes it easy to figure out how to ... Travel tips/top 10 lists
Sat, 28 Jun 2008 18:51:00 GMT,
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| What’s new You’re a smart guy, right? Sure you are! And have we got something for you. Its our FareCompare Quiz. Might want to practice first, with Quiz #1 , before tackling Quiz #2. What’s new
Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:32:00 GMT,
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Booking.farecompare.com Booking.farecompare.com
Mon, 30 Jun 2008 03:40:00 GMT,
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| Farecompare.com news blog » airline websites Legacy Carriers. American http://www.aa.com/index_us.jhtml 1-800-433-7300. Continental http://www.continental.com/web/en-US/default.aspx 1-800-525-0280 Farecompare.com news blog » airline websites
Thu, 26 Jun 2008 15:47:00 GMT,
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| Destinations Sounds kind of crazy , but freezing Chicago is just the spot for some winter time ... 2007 FareCompare.com LP ... Destinations
Fri, 27 Jun 2008 05:31:00 GMT,
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| Holiday travel But fear not, as this year you’ll be armed with Farecompare.com’s must-have list of holiday travel Dos and Don’ts ; our experts have compiled this list from years of air ... Holiday travel
Tue, 24 Jun 2008 13:48:00 GMT,
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