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Wii Sports Became #1 Selling Game of All Time! Surpasses SMB (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Wii Sports has now passed sales of Super Mario Bros. (NES), making it the top selling console game of all time!
Which Summer Movies Did The Writers' Strike Hit Hardest? (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Last year, Hollywood's writers went on strike for 14 weeks, and genre television took tremendous damage as a result. But movies didn't emerge unscathed, either ? we just won't see the fallout until this year. So how does this affect the movies you care about? Here's a rundown.
What's G-Stone Been Up To? (or Tips For A Great 2009) (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Cracked.com
Update: Twitter blames celebrity hack on 'individual' (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
CNN anchor Rick Sanchez wasn't really high on crack this morning, and the reason his Twitter feed said so wasn't the phishing scam that's been going around--it was a lone hacker, the microblogging service said later on Monday.
Top 10 NFL Coaching Carousel Plot Lines. Who Lands Where? (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
One week after Black Monday, there are still six head-coaching vacancies, two open G.M. jobs, and no real sense as to who?ll get any of the positions. Here are ten takes on this year?s jobs that have come open, those that haven?t, and those that apparently won?t.
The day the music died...piano-player roll production ends (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
The remark scribbled at the end of the production sheet said simply, ?End of era.?It was written shortly after the last piano roll came off the assembly line at QRS Music Technologies, 1026 Niagara St., at noon Wednesday.
The Show Must Go On? Not If It's Public Access (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
For decades, public access programming on cable television has provided a virtually free forum for community activists and aspiring entertainers, for preening star wannabes as well as serious-minded political watchdogs. But in Los Angeles and across California that forum began crumbling last week.
The Sexiest Magazine Covers of 2008 (PICS) (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Pictures may be worth a thousand words, but some of these covers feel like they're worth a million bucks. Check out our picks for the hottest headliners of the year.
Spread the debt around (COMIC) (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
It's the American way!
Security and your mother's Linux box (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
As the professor of security engineering at Cambridge University, Ross Anderson is one of the founders of security economics as an academic discipline. Perhaps more impressively, though, he wants your ISP to send you cash every time you get spam.
Mouse Wonders: Can I Has Cheezburger? (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Aren't animals just great?
Minnesota Canvassing Board Certifies Franken Win (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
The Minnesota State Canvassing Board on Monday certified the results of the recount of Republican Sen. Norm Coleman's fight to retain his seat against Democrat Al Franken. The results showed Franken with a 225-vote lead. Coleman's attorney, Tony Trimble, said shortly after the ruling that the campaign will officially file a lawsuit.
Macworld 2009: The Gingerbread Mac [Gallery] (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Check out this gingerbread Mac, created by a festive fanboy known only as minorbug. It stands 7-8 inches tall and features chocolate icons, ports, and other lovely little iced details, as you can see in these pictures.
Inventor: Geo-Engineer a Worldwide Refrigerator Using Oceans (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Bailing out the entire human race might turn out to be cheaper than bailing out Wall Street: Spray gigatons of seawater into the air, mainly in the Northern Hemisphere, and let Mother Nature do the rest, suggests inventor Ron Acer in a patent petition for ?a colossal refrigeration system with a 100,000-fold performance multiplier.?
Huge Undersea 'Wall' Discovered (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
A giant rock formation resembling a city wall has been discovered under the Taiwan Strait.The 220m stretch of basalt rock was found by biodiversity researcher Jeng Ming-hsiou.He said it was likely to have been formed by a volcanic eruption up to 1,800 years ago.
Habitable Exoplanets Could be Common in Our Galaxy (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
By observing the remains of smashed up asteroids around dead stars, astronomers were able to deduce their chemical composition. They found that the dust of many chewed-up asteroids resembles the materials inside Earth and the other small, rocky inner planets of our solar system.
Guantánamo May Close, But in Afghanistan Another Gitmo Grows (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
The incoming Obama Administration says it wants to shut down the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay. But even if Guantánamo closes, it won't end the controversial U.S. practice of jailing suspected al Qaeda militants and other terrorists indefinitely.
Google to Release Picasa Beta for Mac (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Google plans to release on Monday a beta version of Picasa for Mac OS X, helping Apple fans catch up to Windows and Linux users already employing the free tool for editing, cataloging, and uploading photos.
Fake Facebook Profile Angers Guyana President (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
There are hundreds of George Bushes, scores of Fidel Castros, and dozens of Hugo Chávezes, all with prank profiles on the social networking website Facebook, but when someone tried to pass him or herself off as the president of Guyana the real president didn't see the funny side.
Drunk Judge Hits Police Car, Gets Slap On Wrist (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
In a proceeding that took less than 15 minutes, a judge who police say was drunk when she drove into a parked state police cruiser -- and who allegedly made racist remarks after the collision -- was accepted into an alcohol education program. Which, if successfully completed, could lead to the erasure of the charges against her in a year.
China Launches Crackdown on Internet Pornography (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
China launched a major crackdown on Internet pornography Monday targeting popular online portals and major search engines such as Google.
Cheap Thrills: Gadget Makers Bet on Budget Gear in 2009 (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Get ready for an onslaught of the cheap. With the economy more unstable than Plaxico Burress' mental state, electronics manufacturers are putting the e-brakes on their budgets,
Campaign to Stop File-Sharers Being ?Guilty Upon Accusation? (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Next month, New Zealand is scheduled to implement Section 92 of the Copyright Amendment Act. The controversial act provides ?Guilt Upon Accusation?, which means that if a file-sharer is simply accused of copyright infringement, they are immediately guilty. The punishment - summary Internet disconnection.
Architectural Wind: A Cleaner Way to Keep the City Running (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
A new building with affordable rents in the Bronx will be powered partly by 10 wind turbines, which should cut its utility bills for common areas in half.
Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
It couldn't be simpler!
A new era for Macworld Expo (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Without Steve Jobs delivering his trademark keynote address, Macworld Expo won't likely make the same splash. But the show goes on, for now at least. A CNET article by CNET News.com Staff, Staff Writer, CNET News. Published on January 5, 2009 9:00 AM PST.
20 Most Anticipated Video Games of 2009 (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
You're probably playing catch up with all the great games that came out the last few months, but you better hurry up. There's a lot more coming in 2009. You can expect everything from sequels to game series reboots to brand new franchises. Here are 20 of 2009's most anticipated games.
U.S. smooths away an illegal border crossing wrinkle (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
A massive earth-moving project is transforming Smuggler's Gulch near San Diego from a narrow canyon used by cattle thieves, bandits and illegal immigrants into a plugged breach. For a century, the narrow canyon leading into California from Mexico provided cover for cattle thieves and opium dealers, bandits and booze runners.
Today (January 5th) Is The Most Stressful Day Of The Year (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Today is the most stressful day of the year, according to researchers. A combination of the cold weather, economic gloom and end to Christmas festivities will leave workers battling the January blues.
Third Bush For President. WTF! (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Former president George HW Bush, father of the outgoing US commander-in-chief, has touted another son, Jeb, for a future presidential bid. "I'd like to see him run. I'd like to see him be president some day," the elder Bush, 84 told Fox News yesterday. "I think he's as qualified and able as anyone I know," he said in an interview.
Researchers: Detox Products Don't Work, Not Worth Money (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
British researchers working for the nonprofit Sense About Science surveyed face creams, foods, beverages, foot pads and other products claiming to offer their users a detox experience.
Regulators probed Madoff eight times over 16 years: report (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
(Reuters) - Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC was examined at least eight times in 16 years by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and other regulators, who often came armed with suspicions, the Wall Street Journal said. SEC...
Oakland Police Officer Shoots Unarmed Man, Handcuffed Man (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
BART-Police who patrol the Bay Area's subway system came to break up a fight. They had a 22 year old man named Omar Grant in handcuffs and on the ground when an officer shot him point blank in the head.
Nine European countries hit by gas shortages amid Russia.. (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Nine countries in and around Europe have now reported problems with their gas supply as a result of Russia's dispute with the Ukraine, after Slovakia, Greece and Croatia today disclosed they were experiencing drops in gas pressure.
Icy days and nights (PICS) (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Today is the opening day of the Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival, in Harbin, China. The festival lasts for one month, and features large ice and snow sculptures, ice lanterns, swimming in the icy Songhua River and more.
DRIVE FOR 5 COMPLETE! CANADA BEATS SWEDEN FOR GOLD 5-1! (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Lots of videos are coming! The Markstrom dives, the awful bite by Andersson, the awesome goals, the celebration, and of course a text summary. YEAHHHHH!
Comcast Able To Slow Bandwidth Hogs Across Its Network Again (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Comcast, which got in trouble with the FCC for its P2P-throttling approach to network management has now completed its plan that deals with bandwidth hogs by slowing all broadband traffic for heavy Internet users during times of congestion. The new system is Protocol-Agnostic which means it isn't targeting P2P protocols only, therefor ok by the FCC
Biofuel Development Shifting From Soil To Sea. (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Bell-bottoms? Designer jeans? Disco? Big hair? Gas shortages. Some icons of the 1970s are emblazoned in the memories of those old enough to remember. A few styles, to the dismay of many, have come back in vogue?oil-related crises among them.
5 Things You Probably Didn't Know: Wolverine (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
From the fact that Wolverine was a sickly child to his war experience, this is a very interesting list to gear up for 'Origins'
'NY Times' Breaks the Page-One Ad Barrier (digg.com: Stories / Popular)
Notice something unusual about this morning's copy of The New York Times? It features the paper's first-ever page-one display ad -- a promo for CBS whose copy playfully reads "Front Page News."
Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard | The Onion - America's Finest News ...
Joomla Developer's Toolbox | Developer's Toolbox | Smashing Magazine (Delicious popular)
MOONGIFT: » Dropbox???iPhone/Windows/Mac OSX???????????????Soonr?:???????????? (Delicious popular)
100 Free DIY Legal Resources on the Web by e-Justice Blog (Delicious popular)
Coderholic » Blog Archive » 25 Free Computer Science Books (Delicious popular)
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A Look Back At Kurzweil's Predictions For 2009 (Slashdot)
marciot writes "It's interesting to look back at Ray Kurzweil's predictions for 2009 from a decade ago. He was dead on in predicting the ubiquity of portable computers, wireless, the emergency of digital objects, and the rise of privacy concerns. He was a little optimistic in certain areas, predicting the demise of rotating storage and the ubiquity of digital paper a bit earlier than it appears it will actually happen. On the topic of human-computer speech interfaces, though, he seems to be way off." And of course Kurzweil missed 9/11 and the fallout from that. His predictions might have been nearer the mark absent the war on terror.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Amazon S3 Adds Option To Make Data Accessors Pay (Slashdot)
CWmike writes "Amazon.com has rolled out a new option for its Simple Storage Service (S3) that lets data owners shift the cost of accessing their information to users. Until now, individuals or businesses with information stored on S3 had to pay data-transfer costs to Amazon when others made use of the information. Amazon said the new Requester Pays option relieves data providers of that burden, leaving them to pay only the basic storage fees for the cloud computing service. The bigger question with the cloud is, who really pays? Mark Everett Hall argues that IT workers do."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
ESA Embraces Open Source With New SAR Toolbox (Slashdot)
phyr writes "The European Space Agency (ESA) has released its Next ESA SAR Toolbox (NEST) freely as GPL for Linux and Windows. It provides an integrated viewer for reading, calibrating, post-processing and analysis of ESA (ERS 1&2, ENVISAT) and 3rd party (Radarsat2, TerraSarX, Alos Palsar, JERS) SAR level 1 data and higher. ESA has chosen to distribute the software as fully open source to allow the remote sensing community to easily develop new readers/writers and post-processors for SAR data with their NEST Java API. The software provides both a command line interface and GUI for all features including data conversion, graph processing, coregistration, multilooking, filtering, and band arithmetic."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
LG High-Def TVs To Stream Netflix Videos (Slashdot)
DJAdapt writes to tell us that LG has launched a new line of high definition TVs that will be capable of streaming Netflix videos with no additional hardware. This is just another in a long line of expansions from the once DVD rental service, which has expanded to the Roku set top box, Xbox 360, PC, Mac, and Linux platforms recently. "Piping movies directly to TV sets is the natural evolution of the video streaming service, said Reed Hastings, the chief executive of Netflix. "The TV symbolizes the ultimate destination," he said. That idea -- shared by Sony Corp., which already streams feature films and TV shows directly to its Bravia televisions -- is still in its early stages. Netflix's streaming service taps a library of 12,000 titles, while the company's DVD menu numbers more than 100,000 titles. Hastings expects that gap will "definitely narrow" over time, but he noted that DVDs maintain an advantage over streaming, which is that "they are very profitable" for film studios."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Do Twitter Phishing Scams Herald the End of Microblogs? (Slashdot)
An anonymous reader writes "Twitter's been hit by a big phishing scam. Culture Crash blogger Dan Tynan says this is the end of Twitter's innocence. Will tweets become like email, with two out of every three just worthless spam?"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
36 Must Have Backgrounds and Patterns Resources for all Designers : Speckyboy - Web Design, Web ...
Microsoft Rumored To Lay Off Thousands Worldwide (Slashdot)
nandemoari writes "It seems not even Microsoft is impervious to the effects of this increasingly painful recession. According to reports, the Redmond-based company is preparing to lay off about 17 per cent of its entire workforce in the coming months. Despite its portfolio diversity — including operating systems, antivirus software, and video game consoles — Microsoft is clearly feeling the pressure applied by a tightening global economy. In fact, there seems to be a sense of emergency to the massive cuts (about 15,000 workers out of 90,000), which rumors suggest should be made official by January 15."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Tooth Regeneration Coming Soon (Slashdot)
Ponca City, We love you writes "For thousands of years, losing teeth has been a routine part of human aging. Now the Washington Post reports that researchers are close to growing important parts of teeth from stem cells, including creating a living root from scratch, perhaps within one year. According to Pamela Robey of the NIH. 'Dentists say, "Give me a root and I can put a crown on it."' In a few years dentists will treat periodontal disease with regeneration by using stem cells to create hard and soft tissue; they will take out a tooth that is about to fall, and reconnect it firmly to the regenerated tissue. Although nobody is predicting when it will be possible to grow teeth on demand, in adults, to replace missing ones, a common guess is five to ten years. Baby and wisdom teeth are sources of stem cells that could be 'banked' for future health needs, says Robey. 'When you think about it, the teeth children put under their pillows may end up being worth much more than the tooth fairy's going rate. Plus, if you still have your wisdom teeth, it's nice to know you're walking around with your own source of stem cells.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Milky Way Heavier Than Thought, and Spinning Faster (Slashdot)
An anonymous reader writes "The Milky Way is spinning much faster and has 50 per cent more mass than previously believed. This means the Milky Way is equivalent in size to our neighbor Andromeda — instead of being the little sister in the local galaxy group, as had been believed. One implication of this new finding is that we may collide with Andromeda sooner than we had thought, in 2 or 3 billion years instead of 5."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Carefully Timed Jerks Could Power Space Elevator (Slashdot)
Hugh Pickens writes "BBC has an interesting article on the long-standing issue of how to power the 'climber' that would ascend a space elevator into space. Previous ideas have included delivering microwave or laser power to the climber beamed from the Earth's surface, but now European Space Agency ground station engineer Age-Raymond Riise has demonstrated a device that could provide a "lift into space" for cheaper space missions along a 100,000-km long tether anchored to the Earth. Riise demonstrated sending power mechanically by providing carefully timed jerks of the cable at its base with a broomstick to represent the cable held in tension, an electric sander to provide a rhythmic vibration to the bottom of the stick, and three brushes representing the climber with their bristles pointing downwards allowing the climber assembly to slide upward along the broomstick as it moved slightly downward, but grip it as it moved slightly upward. 'It would be possible to make a suspension system that completely decouples the cabin where the passengers are,' says Riise. 'For them it would be a linear movement with very little disturbance.' Riise says that he has been approached by commercial elevator companies, who are researching new ideas for elevators in superscrapers where the simplicity of the approach makes it attractive when compared to other ideas for powering lifts, such as compressed air."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New Method To Revolutionize DNA Sequencing (Slashdot)
Anonymous Coward writes "A new method of DNA sequencing published this week in science identifies incorporation of single bases by fluorescence. This has been shown to increase read lengths from 20 bases (454 sequencing) to >4000 bases, with a 99.3% accuracy. Single molecule reading can reduce costs and increase the rate at which reads can be performed. 'So far, the team has built a chip housing 3000 ZMWs [waveguides], which the company hopes will hit the market in 2010. By 2013, it aims to squeeze a million ZMWs [waveguides] onto a single chip and observe DNA being assembled in each simultaneously. Company founder Stephen Turner estimates that such a chip would be able to sequence an entire human genome in under half an hour to 99.999 per cent accuracy for under $1000.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Employees the Next (Continuing) Big Security Risk? (Slashdot)
surely_you_cant_be_serious writes "A nationwide survey finds that most companies consider their systems vulnerable to attack. Historically, crime rates increase during recessions — and some believe that cybercrime may well follow suit, especially given massive layoffs and the dim prospects many laid-off employees face in finding a new job. 'One thing companies can start doing is monitoring their networks on an ongoing basis so that they understand the normal pattern of data flow and usage, Brill said. In many cases, companies may not have the internal capability to do this, but outsourcing options are available. Kroll Ontrack, for instance, will be rolling out a 24/7 monitoring service for its global clients manned from a US location by professionals in early 2009.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A Hacker's Audacious Plan To Rule the Underground (Slashdot)
An anonymous reader writes "Wired has the inside story of Max Butler, a former white hat hacker who joined the underground following a jail stint for hacking the Pentagon. His most ambitious hack was a hostile takeover of the major underground carding boards where stolen credit card and identity data are bought and sold. The attack made his own site, CardersMarket, the largest crime forum in the world, with 6,000 users. But it also made the feds determined to catch him, since one of the sites he hacked, DarkMarket.ws, was secretly a sting operation run by the FBI."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Distributed "Nuclear Batteries" the New Infrastructure Answer? (Slashdot)
thepacketmaster writes "The Star reports about a new power generation model using smaller distributed power generators located closer to the consumer. This saves money on power generation lines and creates an infrastructure that can be more easily expanded with smaller incremental steps, compared to bigger centralized power generation projects. The generators in line for this are green sources, but Hyperion Power Generation, NuScale, Adams Atomic Engines (and some other companies) are offering small nuclear reactors to plug into this type of infrastructure. The generator from Hyperion is about the size of a garden shed, and uses older technology that is not capable of creating nuclear warheads, and supposedly self-regulating so it won't go critical. They envision burying reactors near the consumers for 5-10 years, digging them back up and recycling them. Since they are so low maintenance and self-contained, they are calling them nuclear batteries."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
??????????????Photoshop?PSD????????????????????? - GIGAZINE (Delicious popular)
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Ubuntu Kung Fu (Slashdot)
Lorin Ricker writes "Back in the dark ages of windows-based GUIs, corresponding to my own wandering VMS evangelical days, I became enamored of a series of books jauntily entitled Xxx Annoyances (from O'Reilly & Assocs.), where "Xxx" could be anything from "Windows 95", "Word", "Excel" or nearly piece of software which Microsoft produced. These were, if not the first, certainly among the most successful of the "tips & tricks" books that have become popular and useful to scads of hobbyists, ordinary users, hackers and, yes, even professionals in various IT pursuits. I was attracted, even a bit addicted, to these if only because they offered to try to make some useful sense out of the bewildering design choices, deficiencies and bugs that I'd find rampant in Windows and its application repertory. Then I found Keir Thomas, who has been writing about Linux for more than a decade. His new "tips" book entitled, Ubuntu Kung Fu — Tips & Tools for Exploring Using, and Tuning Linux, and published by Pragmatic Bookshelf, is wonderful. Having only recently wandered into the light of Linux, open source software, and Ubuntu in particular, this book comes as a welcome infusion to my addiction." Read below for the rest of Lorin's review.
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Steve Jobs Issues Update On His Health (Slashdot)
i4u writes "Rumors about Steve Jobs' health have been flying high again after Apple announced that he will not be holding the keynote at the Macworld 2009. Today Steve Jobs issued a letter with a rather personal update on why he was losing weight in 2008. The reason for losing weight in 2008 is a hormone imbalance that has been reducing proteins. The remedy for this nutritional problem is relatively simple and straightforward according to Jobs. Steve and his doctors predict that he will have normal weight again by Spring. So stop the rumors and enjoy Macworld 2009."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.