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Comments: 21 +-   The Amiga, Circa 2010 — Dead and Loving It on Saturday January 02, @06:01PM

Posted by timothy on Saturday January 02, @06:01PM
from the nearly-as-good-as-os/2-warp dept.
amiga
Orion Blastar writes "While many Amiga users have moved on to Linux, Mac OS X, and even, gasp shock, Microsoft Windows some of us don't want to give up so easily. There are two open source projects that are keeping the Amiga legacy alive even if Amiga Inc. seems to be deader than a doornail and not really doing much but selling old Classic Amiga games for new platforms. Like WINE, there was a project to run AmigaOS 3.1 software for Linux and other platforms, but it evolved instead into an open source operating system named Amiga Research OS, or AROS. AROS is best run inside an emulator, and while it is not a modern OS like Linux, it can be downloaded and run inside of Linux (and the downloads section has more). While it is not ready for prime time yet, it is a promising OS that is being ported to many platforms and uses the user friendly Amiga GUI we Amiga users grew up with." Read on for more.
Read 1436 More Bytes... 21 comments story

Comments: 66 +-   Finding Someone To Manage Selling a Software Company? on Saturday January 02, @04:50PM

Posted by timothy on Saturday January 02, @04:50PM
from the ignorance-not-bliss dept.
rrrrw22 writes 'My company has spent the last year developing a framework for creating games on Facebook, Myspace, and Twitter. While we had originally planned to release the product to the public and take a percent of the revenue, we have realized that we can make more money by selling the application to a funded company entering the social gaming space. Our problem is we don't have many other contacts in the social gaming space and would like to find someone to manage selling the company for us (in exchange for a percent of the sale.) Where can we go about finding someone with the skills and contacts to sell a product like this? What experiences have others had trying to sell a company that we can learn from?'
Read More... 66 comments story

Comments: 173 +-   Canada's Airlines Face a Privacy Dilemma on Saturday January 02, @03:43PM

Posted by timothy on Saturday January 02, @03:43PM
from the our-way-and-the-high-way dept.
privacy
Interoperable writes "Canada's airlines are caught between a rock and a hard place in the face of new US regulations that require them to collect and hand over personal information about passengers. Handing over information regarding a passenger's name, gender and birth-date may violate Canadian privacy laws but merely flying over American airspace is conditional on doing exactly that. It seems that the long arms of the TSA are eager to grope at Canadians taking a shortcut to Toronto; no doubt to prevent any terrorist attacks on Lake Huron."
Read More... 173 comments story

Comments: 134 +-   Google Chrome Displaces Safari As Third In Survey on Saturday January 02, @02:36PM

Posted by timothy on Saturday January 02, @02:36PM
from the tight-race-for-3d dept.
google
Azureflare writes "According to a Net Applications survey, Google Chrome has replaced Apple's Safari as the number-three browser. This may be partially explained by the release of the Chrome beta on Mac and Linux, but may also be due to users jumping ship from IE. More analysis on this topic can be found at ComputerWorld. As anecdotal evidence of Google Chrome usage gaining steam, Bank of America has apparently recently added Google Chrome to their list of officially supported browsers."
Read More... 134 comments story

Comments: 265 +-   China Moving To Restrict Neodymium Supply on Saturday January 02, @01:28PM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday January 02, @01:28PM
from the not-for-all-the-tea-in-oh-wait dept.
technology
GuyFawkes writes with this quote from the Independent: "Britain and other Western countries risk running out of supplies of certain highly sought-after rare metals that are vital to a host of green technologies, amid growing evidence that China, which has a monopoly on global production, is set to choke off exports of valuable compounds. Failure to secure alternative long-term sources of rare earth elements (REEs) would affect the manufacturing and development of low-carbon technology, which relies on the unique properties of the 17 metals to mass-produce eco-friendly innovations such as wind turbines and low-energy light bulbs. China, whose mines account for 97 per cent of global supplies, is trying to ensure that all raw REE materials are processed within its borders. During the past seven years it has reduced by 40 per cent the amount of rare earths available for export."
Read More... 265 comments story

Comments: 175 +-   Why Apple Denied the Google Latitude App on Saturday January 02, @12:18PM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday January 02, @12:18PM
from the what-a-coincidence dept.
patents
awyeah writes "A recently revealed Apple patent looks remarkably similar to the functionality of Google Latitude, which Apple relegated to WebApp status earlier this year. Obviously if Apple is working on their own version of Google Latitude (or owns the IP rights to this functionality), they'd be hesitant to put an app with the same functionality on their devices from another company."
Read More... 175 comments story

Comments: 403 +-   Thorium, the Next Nuclear Fuel? on Saturday January 02, @10:57AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday January 02, @10:57AM
from the plenty-on-the-auction-house dept.
power
mrshermanoaks writes "When the choices for developing nuclear energy were being made, we went with uranium because it had the byproduct of producing plutonium that could be weaponized. But thorium is safer and easier to work with, and may cause a lot fewer headaches. 'It's abundant — the US has at least 175,000 tons of the stuff — and doesn't require costly processing. It is also extraordinarily efficient as a nuclear fuel. As it decays in a reactor core, its byproducts produce more neutrons per collision than conventional fuel. The more neutrons per collision, the more energy generated, the less total fuel consumed, and the less radioactive nastiness left behind. Even better, Weinberg realized that you could use thorium in an entirely new kind of reactor, one that would have zero risk of meltdown. The design is based on the lab's finding that thorium dissolves in hot liquid fluoride salts. This fission soup is poured into tubes in the core of the reactor, where the nuclear chain reaction — the billiard balls colliding — happens. The system makes the reactor self-regulating: When the soup gets too hot it expands and flows out of the tubes — slowing fission and eliminating the possibility of another Chernobyl. Any actinide can work in this method, but thorium is particularly well suited because it is so efficient at the high temperatures at which fission occurs in the soup.' So why are we not building these reactors?"
Read More... 403 comments story

Comments: 403 +-   Novelist Blames Piracy On Open Source Culture on Saturday January 02, @09:35AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday January 02, @09:35AM
from the this-gentleman-clearly-grasps-his-subject-matter dept.
books
joeflies writes "CNN published an article entitled 'Digital Piracy Hits the e-Book Industry.' It quotes the following statement by novelist Sherman Alexie: 'With the open-source culture on the Internet, the idea of ownership — of artistic ownership — goes away. It terrifies me.'" The article also points out a couple of interesting statistics for a "slumping" industry beset by piracy: "Sales for digital books in the second quarter of 2009 totaled almost $37 million. That's more than three times the total for the same three months in 2008, according to the Association of American Publishers," and "consumers who purchase an e-reader buy more books than those who stick with traditional bound volumes. Amazon reports that Kindle owners buy, on average, 3.1 times as many books on the site as other customers."
Read More... 403 comments story

Comments: 346 +-   Did the US Take the Back Seat In Science In 2009? on Saturday January 02, @08:16AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday January 02, @08:16AM
from the relegated-to-the-trunk dept.
usa
tcd004 writes "In the PBS NewsHour's roundup of the biggest science news of the year, Neil DeGrasse Tyson dropped this doozie: '[Scientific leadership] drives the economic strength and security of nations. The fall is not from a cliff. More like a slow, downward slide — almost imperceptible from day to day. But as the years pass America will have descended from leaders to players to merely followers as we fade to insignificance, at best hitching a ride on the innovations of others.'"
Read More... 346 comments story

Comments: 183 +-   China Arrests Thousands In Internet Porn Crackdown on Saturday January 02, @05:14AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday January 02, @05:14AM
from the that-fourth-party-crap-doesn't-sound-so-bad-anymore dept.
government
Clandestine_Blaze writes "Chinese police have arrested 5,394 people — with another 4,186 criminal cases in the works — in one of the largest crackdowns on Internet porn in the country. Even more arrests are expected in 2010, according to the Ministry of Public Security's website (In Chinese or Google translated into English). According to the Reuters article on the crackdown, one of the justifications was that the pornography was 'threatening the emotional health of children.' From the English translation of the Ministry of Public Security's website linked above, it appears that certain provinces are also offering 1,000 yuan and 2,000 yuan rewards, per person, for reporting illegal websites to the government."
Read More... 183 comments story

 
Poll Until I remember to write '2010' instead of '2009':
1 or 2 days, tops.
3 or 4 days -- a week at most.
More than a week, less than a month.
A month or more.
Never noticed a lag in this: it's one year, or it's not.
I'm still on 2002!
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:155 | Votes:10127

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