Archive for January, 2009
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 [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
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 [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
ruphus13 writes “Two of the technical leads and core committers of the Lucene Project have launched Lucid Imagination, a venture backed company now offering commercial versions of Lucene and SOLR in the hopes of making it the defacto choice of search technologies used by companies within their products. ‘The Lucene search library ranks amongst the [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
Pandanapper writes to tell us Yahoo is reporting that if you find yourself watching an ad on a video screen in a public venue, the ad may be watching you as well. “Small cameras can now be embedded in the screen or hidden around it, tracking who looks at the screen and for how long. [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
An anonymous reader writes to tell us that Blizzard has added another victory in their campaign against World of Warcraft bots. A federal judge has ruled that not only did the Glider bot break the EULA, it can be classified as a circumvention device under the DMCA. “As we’ve noted before, Blizzard’s legal arguments, which [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
mytrip writes to tell us that Mark Gorton of LimeWire fame is translating his knowledge from moving bits to moving people. Taking profits earned from his software business, Gorton is applying them to projects aimed at making urban transportation safer, faster, and more sustainable. “That’s not the only connection between open-source software and Gorton’s vision [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
Urchin writes to tell us that physicists working in a new field called “phononics” claim that waste heat from a processor could actually be used to add to its power. “Crunching data coded using photons - photonic computing - is one example, and in 2007 researchers built the first workable optical transistor. But now the [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
suraj.sun writes to tell us that in preparation for nearly a quarter of a million people descending on Tampa for the Super Bowl, the Tampa authorities are deploying new tech for security communications and response. All of the incidents and communications will be plotted and tracked on a new implementation of Microsoft’s Surface. Hopefully it [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
jmizrahi writes “I’ve recently started working in experimental physics. Quite a few programs are used in the lab for assorted purposes — Labview, Igor, Inventor, Eagle, to name just a few. They are all proprietary. This seems to be standard practice, which surprised me. Does anybody know of any open source software intended for scientific [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments
theodp writes “At the World Economic Forum, Michael Dell’s pitch to help Russia with its computers got the cold-as-Siberia shoulder from Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. ‘We don’t need help,’ shot back Putin. ‘We are not invalids. We don’t have limited mental capacity’ (video — rant starts at 1:24). ‘Our programmers are some of the best [...]
January 31st, 2009 | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments