C "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> Slashdot - News for nerds, stuff that matters
Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments
typodupeerror delete not in

Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

+ - Screenshot-sm   Designer Builds Coffin For Xbox's Suffering RROD on Tuesday March 16, @12:34PM

Posted by samzenpus on Tuesday March 16, @12:34PM
from the rust-in-peace dept.
games
angry tapir writes "The Xbox 360 RROD coffin is created by Aussie designer Alexis Vanamois, and it does exactly what it says on the tin. It's the ultimate final resting place for 'bricked' Xbox 360 consoles that have suffered the Red Ring of Death; it even has a cavity for your controller!"
View Picture... story

Comments: 36 + -   Blind Soldier Uses Tongue To 'See' on Tuesday March 16, @12:19PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday March 16, @12:19PM
from the in-the-future-we'll-all-be-robots dept.
biotech
Zen found this story about a blind soldier using a lollypop-sized tongue sensor to 'see.' The system actually enables him to walk and read unaided. The guy says, "It feels like licking a nine-volt battery or like popping candy. The camera sends signals down onto the lollypop and onto your tongue, you can then determine what they mean and transfer it to shapes."
Read More... 36 comments story

Comments: 181 + -   Google Readying To Pull Out of China on Tuesday March 16, @11:35AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday March 16, @11:35AM
from the rumor-and-speculation dept.
google
Sagelinka writes "Both Google and the Chinese government appear to be leaking word that the search firm may soon shutter its operations there as negotiations between the two break down. Google first threatened to halt its operations in China after disclosing in January that an attack on its network from inside China was aimed at exposing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists. At the time, Google also said it was reconsidering its willingness to censor search results of users in China as required by the government. 'I think Google thought China would be flexible,' said Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group. Google has since been negotiating with the Chinese government to find a way to continue operating in the country. Google did not respond today to requests for comment on the state of the negotiations with China."
Read More... 181 comments story

Comments: 120 + -   Blazing Fast Password Recovery With New ATI Cards on Tuesday March 16, @10:55AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday March 16, @10:55AM
from the feel-safe-yet dept.
security
An anonymous reader writes "ElcomSoft accelerates the recovery of Wi-Fi passwords and password-protected iPhone and iPod backups by using ATI video cards. The support of ATI Radeon 5000 series video accelerators allows ElcomSoft to perform password recovery up to 20 times faster compared to Intel top of the line quad-core CPUs, and up to two times faster compared to enterprise-level NVIDIA Tesla solutions. Benchmarks performed by ElcomSoft demonstrate that ATI Radeon HD5970 accelerated password recovery works up to 20 times faster than Core i7-960, Intel's current top of the line CPU unit."
Read More... 120 comments story

Comments: 132 + -   MySpace To Sell User Data on Tuesday March 16, @10:16AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday March 16, @10:16AM
from the what-you're-surprised dept.
privacy
OnlyJedi writes "Hot on the news of Netflix canceling its latest contest over privacy concerns, news has spread that MySpace is going in the opposite direction. Apparently, the one-time leading social network is now selling user data to third party collection firms. From the article, the data that InfoChimps has listed includes 'user playlists, mood updates, mobile updates, photos, vents, reviews, blog posts, names and zipcodes.' InfoChimps is a reseller that deals with individuals and groups, from academic researchers to marketers and industry analysts. So if you're worried about your data on MySpace being sold off to anybody with a few hundred dollars, now's the time to delete that little-used account."
Read More... 132 comments story

Comments: 287 + -   11th Circuit Eliminates 4th Amend. In E-mail on Tuesday March 16, @09:34AM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday March 16, @09:34AM
from the well-that's-not-very-good dept.
privacy
Artefacto writes "Last Thursday, the Eleventh Circuit handed down a Fourth Amendment case, Rehberg v. Paulk, that takes a very narrow view of how the Fourth Amendment applies to e-mail. The Eleventh Circuit held that constitutional protection in stored copies of e-mail held by third parties disappears as soon as any copy of the communication is delivered. Under this new decision, if the government wants get your e-mails, the Fourth Amendment lets the government go to your ISP, wait the seconds it normally takes for the e-mail to be delivered, and then run off copies of your messages."
Read More... 287 comments story

Comments: 364 + -   Deposit Checks To Your Bank By Taking a Photo on Tuesday March 16, @08:50AM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday March 16, @08:50AM
from the ready-for-my-closeup-mister-demille dept.
business
Pickens writes "The Mercury News reports that consumers will soon be able to deposit a check by snapping a photo of it with a cell phone and transmitting an encrypted copy to their bank. Although some critics contend paperless deposits are an attempt by the banking industry to eliminate 'float,' the standard one- or two-day waiting period between the time someone writes a check and the time the money is actually taken out of their account, actually remote-deposit capture started out as a way for big companies and financial institutions to process huge numbers of checks without having to ship them around the country. 'Our customers are becoming more and more tech-savvy,' said an SVP for mobile banking at Citibank. 'We're trying to support those people on the go.' Although the process adds a new wrinkle to concerns about fraud and the privacy of financial data, banks and the technology companies helping them say they have largely overcome these concerns. Another bank SVP said, 'For many institutions struggling to raise deposits and differentiate, this is an outstanding offering they can roll out inexpensively [note: interstitial]. It's a sticky product.'"
Read More... 364 comments story

Comments: 212 + -   FCC's Broadband Plan May Cost You Money on Tuesday March 16, @08:07AM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday March 16, @08:07AM
from the one-hand-giveth dept.
communications
At ten minutes past midnight the FCC released their National Broadband Plan. Judging by the available coverage, few reporters spent the night poring over it. The BBC at least posted something in the morning hours, but it quotes Enderle, so that gives you some idea of its sourcing. Business Week notes the plan's cool (not to say frigid) reception among broadcasters. Dave Burstein of FastNet News did some real digging. His take as of 4:00 am Eastern time is that the plan will cost most Americans money, and won't provide much if any relief to the poor. We'll see many more details and nuances emerge over the day.
Read More... 212 comments story

Comments: 152 + -   UK Internet Filtering Bill Watered Down on Tuesday March 16, @04:48AM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday March 16, @04:48AM
from the still-siding-with-the-man dept.
government
superapecommando writes in with news that in the UK, Liberal Democratic peers will soften their filtering amendment to the Digital Economy Bill, to allow those wrongfully accused of illegal filesharing to sue the rightsholders in court. The previous version of the Bill had drawn instant criticism from some of the world's largest technology companies, including eBay, Google, and Yahoo, who signed an open letter against the filtering proposal. Blogger Glyn Moody summed up opposition to the Bill, stating that in its previous form, it was "utterly one-sided, where the only winners are a music recording industry too lazy to change, and the losers are everyone else."
Read More... 152 comments story

Comments: 85 + -   Golden Nanocages To Put the Heat On Cancer Cells on Tuesday March 16, @01:30AM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday March 16, @01:30AM
from the hot-in-here-or-is-it-me dept.
biotech
ElectricSteve writes "Researchers have been searching for a highly targeted medical treatment that attacks cancer cells but leaves healthy tissue alone. The approach taken by scientists at Washington University in St. Louis is to use 'gold nanocages' that, when injected, selectively accumulate in tumors. When the tumors are later bathed in laser light, the surrounding tissue is barely warmed, but the nanocages convert light to heat, killing the malignant cells. ... Although the tumors took up enough gold nanocages to give them a black cast, only 6 percent of the injected particles accumulated at the tumor site. They would like that number to be closer to 40 percent so that fewer particles would have to be injected. They plan to attach tailor-made ligands to the nanocages that recognize and lock onto receptors on the surface of the tumor cells. ... The scientists at WUSTL have just received a five-year, $2.1M grant from the National Cancer Institute to continue their work with photothermal therapy." Note that Gizmag features a stupid Subscribe nag that covers your screen after about a minute; sounds like a job for NoScript. Last year we discussed somewhat similar research using titanium dioxide nanoparticles to target a particular kind of brain cancer.
Read More... 85 comments story

 
Poll I prefer my (non-technical) books to be ...
Printed and bound.
Converted to some e-book form.
Recorded (abridged).
Recorded (unabridged).
Turned into movies.
What are "non-technical books"?
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:319 | Votes:21710

Slashdot Login

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

Recent reviews from Slashdot readers:

Submitting a review for consideration is easy; please first read Slashdot's book review guidelines. Updated: 2008114 by samzenpus

The only real argument for marriage is that it remains the best method for getting acquainted. -- Heywood Broun