1 Ocak 2013 Salı

New Documents Detail FBI, Bank Crack Down On Occupy Wall Street; A Wish List For Tablets In 2013

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    FAA Device Rules Illustrate the Folly of a Regulated Internet   |  China's Controversial Brain Surgery To Cure Drug Addiction     New Documents Detail FBI, Bank Crack Down On Occupy Wall Street  FAA Device Rules Illustrate the Folly of a Regulated Internet  A Wish List For Tablets In 2013  China's Controversial Brain Surgery To Cure Drug Addiction  Does 2012 Mark the End of the Netbook?  YouTube Drops 2 Billion Fake Music Industry Views  Researcher Warns That Military Must Prepare For "Mutant" Future  The Power of a Hot Body  Origin of Neil Armstrong's 'One Small Step' Line Revealed  Panda Blood May Hold Potent Assailant Against Superbugs  The Future of 802.11ac  EFnet Paralyzed By Vulnerability  Team Aims To Build Robot Toddler In Nine Months  US Firms Race Fiscal Cliff To Install Wind Turbines  Intel's Rumored TV Plans Would Compete With Apple, Google     New Documents Detail FBI, Bank Crack Down On Occupy Wall Street  From the papers-please department
jvillain writes "The Guardian has up a story detailing the crack down on Occupy Wall Street (OWS). It goes on to show how the FBI, DHS. Terrorist Fusion Centers and the banks all worked together to stifle descent. From the article: 'This...
  FAA Device Rules Illustrate the Folly of a Regulated Internet  From the hands-off-the-tubes department
First time accepted submitter cathyreisenwitz writes "The New York Times' Bits blog has a great piece on the FAA's inconvenient, outdated and unhelpful rules regarding electronic devices on planes: 'Dealing with the F.A.A. on this topic is like...
  A Wish List For Tablets In 2013  From the read-all-about-it department
timothy writes "For the last few years, I've been using Android tablets for various of the reasons that most casual tablet owners do: as a handy playback device for movies and music, a surprisingly decent interface for reading books, a...
  China's Controversial Brain Surgery To Cure Drug Addiction  From the than-a-bottle-in-front-of-me department
kkleiner writes "A small handful of doctors in China are using a highly controversial procedure to rid people of drug addiction by destroying a part of patients' brains. The procedure involves drilling small holes into the skulls of patients and...
  Does 2012 Mark the End of the Netbook?  From the so-long-farewell-auf-weidersehen-goodbye department
Voline writes "Digitimes reports that Asus and Acer will not be producing netbooks in 2013 , signaling the end of a product category that Asus began five years ago with it's Eee PC. The Guardian looks at the rise and fall of the netbook and posits...
  YouTube Drops 2 Billion Fake Music Industry Views  From the cure-for-bieber-fever department
An anonymous reader writes "YouTube has dropped 2 billion fake music industry views and their offending videos. From the article: 'Google made good on its promise to weed out views inflated by artificial means last week, according to Daily Dot....
  Researcher Warns That Military Must Prepare For "Mutant" Future  From the laser-eyes-forward department
Researcher Patrick Lin says that with the development of a wide range of technologies including: drugs, special nutrition, gene therapy and robotic implants, the military needs to plan for a future where soldiers have "mutant powers.” From...
  The Power of a Hot Body  From the pickup-line-for-new-year's-eve-parties department
Hugh Pickens writes "Depending on the level of activity, the human body generates about 60 to 100 Watts of energy in the form of heat, about the same amount of heat given off by the average light bulb. Now Diane Ackerman writes in the NY Times...
  Origin of Neil Armstrong's 'One Small Step' Line Revealed  From the too-bad-it-wasn't-mysterious-charades department
SchrodingerZ writes "In an upcoming BBC Documentary, Dean Armstrong, the brother of astronaut Neil Armstrong, reveals when the world famous 'one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind' line originated. For years, people have argued over...
  Panda Blood May Hold Potent Assailant Against Superbugs  From the a-glass-every-morning department
An anonymous reader writes "Pandas have long been the face of conservation efforts by environmental activists, but a recent finding may boost even further the need for pandas to evade extinction. Researchers have discovered a powerful antibody in...
  The Future of 802.11ac  From the always-a-game-of-catch-up department
CowboyRobot writes "The 802.11ac standard is expected to be ratified in 2013 and NetworkComputing has an interview with representatives of Cisco Systems and Aerohive Networks about what that will mean for everyone else. 'Out of the gate, the...
  EFnet Paralyzed By Vulnerability  From the blame-c department
An anonymous reader writes "EFnet member Fionn 'Fudge' Kelleher reported several vulnerabilities in the IRC daemons charybdis, ircd-ratbox, and other derivative IRCds. The vulnerability was subsequently used to bring down large portions of the...
  Team Aims To Build Robot Toddler In Nine Months  From the it's-a-robot department
Zothecula writes "If robots are going to be part of our everyday lives, they'll need to fit into our homes rather than the factory floor. Few people would be comfortable living with a metal spider on tank treads, so the University of Zurich's...
  US Firms Race Fiscal Cliff To Install Wind Turbines  From the last-chance department
Hugh Pickens writes writes "BBC reports that US energy companies are racing to install wind turbines before a federal tax credit expires at the end of this year which could be lost as congress struggles with new legislation to avoid the 'fiscal...
  Intel's Rumored TV Plans Would Compete With Apple, Google  From the getting-in-the-tube department
Nerval's Lobster writes "Google tried to extend its influence to televisions, an effort that largely crashed and burned. Apple executives call Apple TV a 'hobby,' although it's been long-rumored that their company has a television set in the...
     
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