Oct 8th, 2008 · Last week the free and open access repository for scientific (mainly physics but also math, computer sciences...) papers arXiv got past 50,0000 different papers, not counting older versions of the same article. Especially for physicists it is the number …
see also: Online · computer · Science · milestone · publishing · resources · Physicist
Oct 5th, 2008 · On Friday someone posted a false rumor that Steve Jobs had suffered a heart attack on CNN's unverified citizen journalism site, iReport. Apple's stock price went vertical, losing 9% before Apple stepped in and denied the rumor; the stock then recovered …
see also: Online · Apple · media · CNN · schools · Vertical · Journal
Sep 29th, 2008 · The BBC reports that Earth's most ancient rocks, with an age of 4.28 billion years, have been found on the shore of Hudson Bay, Canada. Writing in Science journal, a team reports finding that a sample of Nuvvuagittuq greenstone is 250 million years older …
see also: world · Science · BBC · chemicals · Canada · ancient · signature
Sep 19th, 2008 · Although Turing Award-winning computer scientist Edsger Dijkstra once said, 'the use of Cobol cripples the mind; its teaching should, therefore, be regarded as a criminal offense,' Michael Swaine has an interesting entry to Dr. Dobb's Journal asserting …
see also: software · service · business · computer · scientists · app · Language
Sep 14th, 2008 · The Reverend Professor Michael Reiss, a biologist and Anglican priest, is the education director for the Royal Society, the venerable British science institution. He recently called for creationism to be discussed in science classes, not just in religion …
see also: blog · world · Science · creation · nature · education · institutes
Sep 7th, 2008 · A group of research scientists at Yale discovered that the evolution of opposable thumbs and upright walking in humans is due to changes in the genome in the areas still classified as "junk DNA." Quoting: 'Results from a comparative analysis of the human, …
see also: Science · scientists · research · evolution · Humans · ancestors · animals
Sep 7th, 2008 · Anti-Globalism writes with an excerpt from a story at Ars Technica, according to which "a preliminary study from a group of researchers in Quebec suggest that working on a computer may have an additional impact on our waistlines: taxing mental effort …
see also: computer · Canadian · global · publication · Ars Technica · Mental · food
Aug 25th, 2008 · On August 18 and 19, you submitted questions for NewsTrust founder Fabrice Florin about his (non-profit) site's ability to live up to its claim, "Your guide to good journalism." We sent selected questions to Fabrice on August 19. Here are his answers.Read …
see also: founder · fabricated · Journal · answersRead · NewsTrust · Florin · Fabrice Florin
Aug 23rd, 2008 · Reader Otter points out in his journal a very neat use for the logic contained in Debian's package dependency resolver: solving sudoku puzzles. To me at least, this is much more interesting than the sudoku puzzles themselves.Read more of this story at …
see also: Logic · package · Journal · Debian · otter · neat · dependency
Aug 21st, 2008 · Microsoft has signed up comedian Jerry Seinfeld to its $300 million Vista PR blitz, as it attempts to turn around the negative perception surrounding its operating system. Reports suggest Bill Gates will also appear in the ads, which, given the comedy …
see also: video · TV · Microsoft · company · ads · Vista · Mac
Aug 18th, 2008 · NewsTrust is, to quote from the site's header, "Your guide to good journalism." Specifically, NewsTrust links to stories published both by well-known media and by less-known blogs, and asks its users to rank and review those stories on accuracy, balance, …
see also: Online · blog · interview · media · founder · cameras · multimedia
Aug 13th, 2008 · John Tierney poses the question in the New York Times 'what if we let athletes do whatever they wanted to excel?' Before you dismiss the notion, consider what we're stuck with today — a system designed to create a level playing field, protect athletes' …
see also: protection · ca · New York Times · health · nature · Victory · Children
Aug 11th, 2008 · Aviran was one of many readers to submit news of a just-announced development in the ongoing quest to develop a working invisibility cloak, writing: "Scientists say they are a step closer to developing materials that could render people and objects invisible. …
see also: world · Science · engineering · scientists · nature · demonstrations · Reuters
Aug 8th, 2008 · Mike sends in the story of a new fingerprint technology with interesting potential for both crime detection and rights violations; there are also intriguing possibilities in fighting cancer. "Using a variation of mass spectrometry called 'desorption electrospray …
see also: computer · Science · technology · company · Explosion · illegal · identity
Aug 5th, 2008 · Calopteryx notes a New Scientist article on the discovery of "supercritical" water emerging from a vent in the Atlantic Ocean at 407 deg. C (765 deg. F). One of its discoverers actually said, "It's water, but not as we know it"; it's the hottest water …
see also: New Scientist · Discovery · Atlantic Ocean · sea · temperatures · county · measurements
Jul 23rd, 2008 · So, all your servers run on RAID. You back up religiously. You're even sure that your backups are recoverable. But do you also need a UPS? According to Halfgaar (on Slashdot before to promote better Linux backup practices), yes, usually you do. He argues …
see also: Linux · servers · ups · technologies · advancements · Journal · backup
Jul 23rd, 2008 · PoliTech notes in a journal entry that "Vista is the gift that just keeps on giving." "Speaking during SanDisk's second-quarter earnings conference call, Chairman and [CEO] Eli Harari said that Windows Vista will present a special challenge for solid …
see also: desktop · technology · environment · memory · Vista · Windows Vista · CEO
Jul 13th, 2008 · Japanese researchers have found a way to build long threads of DNA using miniaturized hooks and bobbins. In fact, they've demonstrated how to manipulate delicate DNA chains without breaking them. They've designed these laser-directed microdevices to pick …
see also: scientists · Machine · demonstrations · laser · DNA · molecules · syndrome
Jul 9th, 2008 · Reader Chemisor advances a theory in his journal that a linguistic misunderstanding is at the root of many disagreements over different licensing philosophies, in particular BSD vs. GPL. The argument is that GPL adherents desire the freedom of their code, …
see also: theory · Logic · licensing · civilization · freedom · GPL · Journal
Jul 2nd, 2008 · Ever since Fortune wrote an article about it, mentions have been occurring hither and yon about how Google is having problems retaining employees, and the latest comes in Web 2.0 Journal, where Dare Obasanjo interestingly tracks and interprets a couple …
see also: Google · blog · Microsoft · company · fortune · startups · employees