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Showing posts from June, 2005

Grow Puzzle

Try this puzzle http://kiteretsu.jp/on/grow3/ Its one that will make u go crazy. I got the complete score 20000 after an hour. Put things in order so that it helps the other to grow. Just a hint. Start with egg and then the robo(the box) And the last 3 be dish, booster & tv

Microsoft Readies BitTorrent Alternative

Researchers at Microsoft's (Profile, Products, Articles) Cambridge, England, labs are developing a file-sharing technology that they say could make it easier to distribute big files such as films, television programs and software applications to end-users over the Internet. Code-named Avalanche, the technology is similar to existing peer-to-peer (P-to-P) file swapping systems such as BitTorrent's, in the sense that large files can be divided into many smaller pieces to ease their distribution. End users request the file parts from other users' hard drives and reassemble them to create the original file. Such systems can scale well to serve millions of users, and reduce the bandwidth and computing costs of sending content directly to users from central servers. Some have also irritated publishers who complain the services are used to share copyright works illegally. The problem with existing systems, according to Microsoft, is that people sometimes have wait a long time to r

Found: Europe's oldest civilisation

Archaeologists have discovered Europe's oldest civilisation, a network of dozens of temples, 2,000 years older than Stonehenge and the Pyramids. More than 150 gigantic monuments have been located beneath the fields and cities of modern-day Germany, Austria and Slovakia. They were built 7,000 years ago, between 4800BC and 4600BC. Their discovery, revealed today by The Independent, will revolutionise the study of prehistoric Europe, where an appetite for monumental architecture was thought to have developed later than in Mesopotamia and Egypt. In all, more than 150 temples have been identified. Constructed of earth and wood, they had ramparts and palisades that stretched for up to half a mile. They were built by a religious people who lived in communal longhouses up to 50 metres long, grouped around substantial villages. Evidence suggests their economy was based on cattle, sheep, goat and pig farming. Their civilisation seems to have died out after about 200 years and the recent arch

RSS To Carry Spyware Before Year's Out

By the end of the year, spyware programs will have tripled in number, put Firefox in their sights, and have turned to RSS to distribute its key loggers and ad spawners, a security expert said Friday. Richard Stiennon, director of threat research at anti-spyware software vendor Webroot, first presented his six predictions at this week's Gartner IT Security Summit. Number one on his list? "The first spyware that targets Firefox will appear in the first half of 2005," prognosticated Stiennon. "That means either a spyware writer will take advantage of a vulnerability in Firefox, as others already have in Internet Explorer, or create a site that forces Firefox to invisibly download and install adware or spyware." Stiennon's apparently not worried about the impending deadline for his prediction. "Test code against Firefox exists," he said, "and I've seen [spyware] exploits against Firefox that don't work. At the Gartner conference, I had a c

isnoop.net's free gmail invites no more

I just went to check the number of invites with isnoop.net and this is what it said: I Quote from http://isnoop.net/gmail/ I have gotten the word from Gmail's Product Manager that my service is no longer tolerable. At midnight PDT June 7th, 2005, this service was disabled. I would like to extend my sincere thanks to all who contributed to this service. Your generosity helped out a vast number of people and for that you should be proud. The gmail spooler email account is now deactivated and any mail sent to it will bounce. If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to drop me a line: email@isnoop.net Did you know there was more to this site than just a Gmail invite spooler? Check out some of the other fancy tools and toys I've whipped up. --Ian "isnoop" Anthony Too bad its so popular service has been cut short by Google. :( Do you think its an indication of gmail moving out of beta, as it already allows u to sing up for google account holders (open sign up

Firefox Bugged Again

Spanish Security firm Secunia, has found a seven year old flaw - 'frame injection' vulnerability, in Mozilla's Firefox browser which allows attackers to place malicious content on trusted websites. The warning reveals a flaw in the way the browser handles frames. The application does not verify if a page, displayed in different frames on a particular website originates from the same site. This flaw could be used by a hacker to insert malicious content in one of the frames of a trusted website. The security company pointed out that Firefox 1.x, Mozilla 1.7.x and Camino 0.x versions of the application were vulnerable to the flaw and has rated it as 'moderately critical'. According to a posting by a 'user support moderator' on the Mozilla's online forum, a user viewing a trusted site on one window and has open on another window a malicious website that attacks this vulnerability, can enable the attacker to steal his/her information. To ensure protection, th

NASA frees rover from Martian sand trap

After inch-by-inch progress, Opportunity back on track NASA's Opportunity rover has broken free from the Martian sand dune where it had been stuck for more than a month, the mission's top scientist announced Saturday. "We're out of the trench, and we're back on the surface again," Cornell astronomer Steve Squyres, principal investigator for the Mars Exploration Rovers, told MSNBC.com. In a mission update, Squyres reported that data from the previous day's activities at Meridiani Planum showed all six of the rover's wheels on top of the soil. "We've been confident all along that this would happen, but still ... what a relief!" he wrote. The Opportunity rover and Spirit, its twin on the other side of Mars, have been studying the Red Planet from the surface since January 2004. Last year Opportunity sent back headline-grabbing evidence that its landing site was drenched with water in ancient times, and in recent weeks Spirit has been sending

Apple to NOT drop IBM's chips .. but to have them both

Over the past week, there has been renewed rumor-mongering about discussions between Apple and Intel about the possibility of a move to Intel's x86-64 platform. Many have, once again, interpreted this as meaning that Apple would completely drop the PowerPC platform within a short time of moving to x86 -- but that is not at all what we've been hearing from sources in Cupertino. Apparently, any adoption of an Intel platform (whether it be x86-64 or something based on the Itanium "EPIC" design; the former being much more likely than the latter) would not be an all-or-nothing proposition. Instead, it would be a move by Apple to introduce its own computer(s) based on Intel and/or AMD hardware, simultaneously with its PowerPC systems -- probably a high-end machine in the PowerMac class. This would include at least some backward compatability for PPC applications and hardware drivers, and would compete within Apple's own offerings against the PowerPC platform. At times

Harry Potter 6 - The Half-Blood Prince

Release Date: July 16, 2005 The following is a list of facts that we know about book six, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. From JKRowling.com: - The link between Chamber of Secrets and Half-Blood Prince relates to a discovery Harry made in 'Chamber' that foreshadows something that he finds out in 'Prince'. - Tom Riddle is not the Half Blood Prince (he is Voldemort). - Arthur Weasley is not the Minister of Magic. - Crucial information in The Half-Blood Prince was originally planned to be placed in Chamber of Secrets, the second book. - The HBP (half-blood prince) is not Harry or Voldemort. - There will not be two chapters in book six titled "Lupin's Papers" and "The Lovegoods in Court." - An excerpt from HBP: "He looked rather like an old lion. There were streaks of grey in his mane of tawny hair and his bushy eyebrows; he had keen yellowish eyes behind a pair of wire-rimmed spectacles and a certain rangy, loping grace even though he w

IBM sells Blue Gene for brain research

IBM has sold a multimillion-dollar model of its new Blue Gene/L supercomputer to simulate the workings of the human brain. The Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Lausanne, Switzerland, purchased the supercomputer, dubbed Blue Brain, and its researchers will collaborate with experts from IBM on the project, Big Blue is expected to announce Monday. The two-year project will build a three-dimensional model that simulates the electrochemistry of a major portion of the brain, the neocortex, with plans to simulate other parts and eventually the entire brain. The researchers hope to understand processes such as perception, thought and memory and to illuminate how malfunctions in the brain's circuitry can lead to problems such as autism or schizophrenia. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but EPFL bought a four-rack Blue Gene model, and IBM charges about $2 million per rack. Each rack has 1,024 Power processors linked with multiple high-speed communications networks. The

Mercedes MP3 Watch

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If you can't afford the svelte S-Class or the catchy C-Class, here's a (relatively) cheaper W-Class MP3 wrist watch for you. The watch has 512mb of memory, and runs for between six to eight hours on a single charge. It also features a voice recorder and can of course store data as well. Generally Mercedes cars would have all top of the line features in even the most basic models, but here we have a 512mb MP3 watch that can only do USB 1.1. What's that top speed again? By the way I was just kidding about the "W-Class" bit, their watches don't fall into any classes. Not yet, anyway.

Journey to the centre of Earth

Japanese scientists are to explore the centre of the Earth. Using a giant drill ship launched next month, the researchers aim to be the first to punch a hole through the rocky crust that covers our planet and to reach the mantle below. The team wants to retrieve samples from the mantle, six miles down, to learn more about what triggers undersea earthquakes, such as the one off Sumatra that caused the Boxing Day tsunami. They hope to study the deep rocks and mud for records of past climate change and to see if the deepest regions of Earth could harbour life. Asahiko Taira, director general of the Centre for Deep Earth Exploration in Yokohama, near Tokyo, said: "One of the main purposes of doing this is finding deep bacteria within the ocean crust and upper mantle. We believe there has to be life there. It's the same mission as searching for life on Mars." Rocks in the upper mantle produce compounds essential for life when they react with seawater. "This is a system wh

The machine that can copy anything

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A revolutionary machine that can copy itself and manufacture everyday objects quickly and cheaply could transform industry in the developing world, according to its creator. The "self-replicating rapid prototyper," or "RepRap" is the brainchild of Dr. Adrian Bowyer, a senior lecturer in mechanical engineering at the University of Bath in the UK. It is based on rapid prototyping technology commonly used to manufacturer plastic components in industry from computer-generated blueprints -- effectively a form of 3D printer. But Bowyer told CNN the RepRap's ability to copy itself could put rapid prototyping technology within reach of the world's poorest communities by alleviating the need for the sort of large-scale industrial infrastructure common across the developed world. "People can start manufacturing goods at a low price," said Bowyer. "All one needs is a computer and a machine that can copy itself. It can spread without enormous expenditur

Firefox 2.0 Roadmap

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Introduction Firefox will be one of the most critical delivery vehicles for Gecko and XULRunner technology in 2005. Our goal is to continue to build a "best of breed" browser product for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. We have ambitious goals for the workload between now and our next major release set. This document is a description of our current thinking on how we intend to get to Firefox 2.0. At this stage it is brief, but over time it will grow much as the 1.0 roadmap did. Structure We are planning for a Firefox 2.0, but will divide the planned work over (at this point) three major Milestones, 1.1 (July 2005), 1.5 (unscheduled) and 2.0 (unscheduled). All major development work will be done on the Mozilla trunk, and these releases will coincide with Gecko version revs. Milestone Plan This is, as always, subject to change. Milestone Release Date Bugs Summary 1.0 Phoenix 2004-11-9 Bugs + - ? Inaugural Release 1.0.1 Rose & Crown 2005-02-24 Security Update 1.0.2

AMD may lower K8 prices in July

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) may cut the prices on its K8 platform CPUs in July, which would come one month before Intel’s planned price cuts for its Pentium 4 600 series, according to market sources. Intel is expected to lower its prices on August 14, although sources indicated Intel may implement the cuts earlier if motherboard sales in the second quarter are lower than expected. AMD claimed no knowledge of the news. In May, AMD announced price cuts of its Sempron processors. Nvidia, which is promoting the AMD platform aggressively, has reduced the price of its nForce3 250 chipset by about US$5, according to sources at Nvidia’s customers. If the cuts go through, the new price will be similar to the price offered by VIA Technologies for its mainstream chips, the sources added.

Laptops Now More Popular Than Desktops

SAN FRANCISCO - In a sure sign that the era of mobile computing has arrived, notebooks have for the first time outsold desktops in the United States in a calendar month, the research firm Current Analysis says. After tracking sales from a sampling of electronics retailers, Current Analysis says notebook sales accounted for 53 percent of the total personal computer market last month, up from 46 percent during the same period last year. San Diego-based Current Analysis does not follow worldwide personal computer sales. Spurring demand for notebooks is their overall price drop as quality has improved, says Sam Bhavnani, senior analyst for Current Analysis. "Just a few years ago, the performance of notebooks was nowhere near where it is today," he said. Notebook prices fell 17 percent during the past year while desktop prices dipped only 4 percent. Some of the features common in most notebooks are longer-lasting batteries, CD burners and wireless capability. The computing crowd i

First ThinkPad tablet set for debut

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The first-ever ThinkPad that converts to a tablet PC will make its debut on Monday, CNET News.com has learned. China's Lenovo Group is expected to announce its new X41 Tablet Series (X41T) in coordination with IBM, which developed the convertible laptop. This is the first computer released by China's Lenovo Group following its purchase of IBM's legendary PC business earlier this year. With its signature black casing, eraser-size trackball and red and blue click buttons, the X41 Tablet Series looks like any other model of IBM's ThinkPad laptop line. However, the 12-inch screen of the X41T can be rotated 180 degrees and pressed flat against the computer's keyboard, turning the notebook into a tablet computer. This was made evident in photos and internal documents supplied by IBM's Japanese laboratories mysteriously that began appearing on the U.S. Federal Communications Commission Web site late last month. A spokesman for Lenovo said the company would be making a

Tech Support

Customer: "I've been ringing 0700 2300 for two days and can't get through to enquiries, can you help?". Operator: "Where did you get that number from, sir?". Customer: "It was on the door to the Travel Centre". Operator: "Sir, they are our opening hours". Samsung Electronics Caller: "Can you give me the telephone number for Jack?" Operator: "I'm sorry, sir, I don't understand who you are talking about". Caller: "On page 1, section 5, of the user guide it clearly states that I need to unplug the fax machine from the AC wall socket and telephone Jack before cleaning. Now, can you give me the number for Jack?" Operator: "I think you mean the telephone point on the wall". RAC Motoring Services Caller: "Does your European Breakdown Policy cover me when I am travelling in Australia?" Operator: Doesn't the product give you a clue? Caller (enquiring about legal requirements while trave

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IRam Boosts Windows Boot

Giga-byte Technology, the Taiwanese hardware maker has found a way to boot PCs based on Microsoft's Windows XP operating system faster. The company has come up with Iram, a PC add-in card with four DDR DRAM (double data rate dynamic RAM memory) slots that's designed to be used as a PC drive. According to the company, since IRam uses DRAM rather than a hard disk to store information, data can be retrieved from the drive up to 60 times faster than is possible with a hard drive. Giga-byte, showed the board at the Computex exhibition in Taipei this week. Tim Handley, a marketing account manager, Gigabyte, said that the IRam was originally designed for video and editing applications where users require fast access to very large files, but the company soon realized that the IRam had other potential applications. He added that, users who are tired of waiting for their Windows-based PCs to boot up, can install Windows on the IRam and use that as the drive to start the system faster. Wh

MS Accepts Korean Site Attack

Software giant, Microsoft, has acknowledged that its South Korean website has recently been victimized by hackers. According to reports, the attack was directed on the news section of the site. Microsoft s spokesperson Adam Sohn confirmed that the site had been attacked on Tuesday morning, and the company had taken the site offline for a few hours to fix the problem. Investigations have revealed that hackers had placed an iFrame on the site, which took advantage of an iFrame vulnerability of Microsoft s Internet explorer (IE), for which the software company had issued a patch in December last year. The vulnerability that empowers the hacker to take control of the victims PC, was only capable of harming un-patched PCs. Systems with Microsoft s Windows XP Service Pack 2 security update are not vulnerable to the attack. The vulnerability would allow attackers to scan the visitor s computer and activate malicious code to steal passwords from the computer. Security researchers discovered th