Archive for January, 2009

Outsourcing: Less money-saving, more time-saving

January 31st, 2009 | Category: ZDNet

Despite the recession and the associated belt-tightening around enterprise IT budgets, cutting costs isn’t front and center for many companies when it comes to outsourcing, according to one of India’s largest services firms. Despite the recession and the associated belt-tightening around enterprise IT budgets, cutting costs isn’t front and…

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Windows 7 To Skip Straight To a Release Candidate

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

b8fait writes “The head of Microsoft Corp.’s Windows development confirmed that Windows 7 will take the unusual path of moving straight from a single beta, which was launched earlier this month, to a release candidate. Sinofsky fleshed out the plan today and hinted that just as there would be no Beta 2, the company would also not provide a RC2 build. In other words, there may be only one released build of Windows 7 before it ships, possibly much sooner than even some of the most aggressive rumors about Windows 7. How much different can Windows 7 really be with such a shortened beta cycle?”

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Senate Passes Another Bill To Delay Digital TV Transition

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

An anonymous reader tips news that the US Senate has passed another bill to delay the transition to digital TV. This is the second such bill to pass the Senate; the first was narrowly defeated in the House. The new version has an important difference — it would allow the transition to take place gradually over the four-month period between the original transition date (February 17th) and the extended date (June 12th). TV stations around the country could choose when they wanted to make the change, allowing those who have already begun plans to stop analog transmission to continue their shut-down operations.

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Google Search Flagging Everything As Potentially Harmful

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

dowlingw writes “It looks like for the moment at least, all Google results are failing the malware checks and being listed with a warning ‘This site may harm your computer,’ including all pages from Google themselves. Users trying to visit pages at search results will only be able to proceed via manual manipulation of the search result link to remove the Google click-through (which is also broken). Until Google fixes this bug, it looks Google web search is useless.” Update: 01/31 at 15:16 GMT by SS: The problem now appears to be fixed.

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Biologists Find Stem-Cell-Like Functions In Ordinary Cells

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

mattrandy123 writes with news that scientists from NYU and Utrecht University have discovered ordinary plant cells can fulfill some of the same regenerative functions previously attributed to stem cells. Quoting: “In the study, the researchers cut off the plant’s root tip, thereby excising the stem cell niche, and examined the return of cell identities by measuring all gene activity. The results suggested that stem cells returned quite late in regeneration after other cells were already replaced. The researchers then used mutant plants in which the stem cell niche no longer functions to confirm their initial observations. Despite the absence of the stem cell niche, the plant’s ordinary cells worked to regenerate all the major tissues constituting the root tip — a process that began hours after it had been removed. However, researchers found that plants without functional stem cell niches could not resume normal growth, showing that other cells did not replace all functions of stem cells.”

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Associated Press Wants RIAA Case Webcast

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes “The Associated Press, The New York Times, and other major news organizations have gone to court to fight the RIAA over its attempt to thwart a court order which ruled that a hearing in SONY BMG Music v. Tenenbaum could be streamed over the internet. The news organizations agreed with Judge Gertner, the district judge who’d granted the order, arguing : ‘It is hard to imagine a hearing more deserving of public scrutiny through the same technological medium that is at the heart of this litigation’. As soon as I get a copy of the actual brief I will upload it and link to it. Another amicus brief opposing the RIAA’s attempt to reverse Judge Gertner was filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and other First Amendment proponents and is already available online [PDF].”

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NASA Offering Free Zero Gravity Flights

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

An anonymous reader writes to tell us that NASA is offering free zero-g flight time for anyone with a viable proposal for emerging space technologies. While NASA will provide the flight time, approved projects will be responsible for all other expenses. “NASA’s Facilitated Access to the Space Environment for Technology Development and Training, or FAST, program helps emerging technologies mature through testing in a reduced gravity environment. To prepare technologies for space applications, it is important to demonstrate they work in a zero-gravity environment. This unique testing environment can be provided in an aircraft flying repeated parabolic trajectories which create brief periods of zero gravity. The aircraft also can simulate reduced-gravity levels similar to those found on the surface of the moon or Mars.”

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Looking Back At Far Cry 2

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

Gamasutra has an interview with Ubisoft’s Patrick Redding about the development of Far Cry 2. He explains his team’s reasoning behind some of the decisions they made while trying to innovate in the very well-established first-person shooter genre. Ubisoft is also trying to crowdsource a guide for the game. “We don’t want to be necessarily spoon-feed everything to people, because that gets insulting. It’s also tiresome if you’re constantly interrupting them to remind them things about that system. I like to learn things through trial and error, and I know a lot of players are like that. But accessibility isn’t just about it being easy to pick up the controls. It’s also making sure that you’re supporting a certain kind of readability, giving the player a certain kind of feedback. Maybe the way to put it is that it might be less a function of the kind of low-level mechanics of the game at the control level, and more about how you’re using the output of the game as good feedback for the player, so they at least are clear on the causal link between what they’re doing and what’s happening.”

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Exchange Comes To Linux As OpenChange

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

joesmart writes to tell us that new work on OpenChange and KDE seeks to bridge the gap between groupware compatibility and open source. KDE developer Brad Hards spoke at the Linux.conf.au conference and said the goal of OpenChange is to implement the Microsoft Exchange protocols as they are used by Outlook. “OpenChange has client and server-side libraries for Exchange integration and relies heavily on code developed for Samba 4. It is open source software licensed under the GPL version 3. Hards said more work is being done on the client side and ‘we have code for the server,’ but estimates another 12 months of development is required to produce an OpenChange server ready for production.”

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Google Unofficially Announces GDrive By Leaked Code

January 31st, 2009 | Category: Slashdot.org

An anonymous reader writes “Google has unofficially announced the GDrive by source code. In an in-direct way, Google has publicly advertised the new, much-anticipated online storage drive called the GDrive. If you take a look at the source code of some javascript within the Google Pack, you will clearly see the GDrive referenced. The code categorizes the GDrive as an ‘Online file backup and storage’ device. It also provides the following descriptions; ‘GDrive provides reliable storage for all of your files, including photos, music and documents’ and ‘GDrive allows you to access your files from anywhere, anytime, and from any device — be it from your desktop, web browser or cellular phone’”

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