Archive for July, 2009

Google Warns About Search-Spammer Site Hacking

Al writes “The head of Google’s Web-spam-fighting team, Matt Cutts, warned last week that spammers are hacking more and more poorly secured websites in order to ‘game’ search-engine results. At a conference on information retrieval, held in Boston, Cutts also discussed how Google deals with the growing problem of search spam. ‘I’ve talked to some […]

Malaria Vaccine, Via Mosquito

CodeShark writes “The AP is reporting that mosquitoes have been used for the first time to deliver anti-malarial vaccine through their bites. According to this article the results were crystal clear: 100% of the vaccinated group acquired immunity, everyone in the non-vaccinated control group did not. Those in the control group and developed malaria when […]

SMS Hack Could Make iPhones Vulnerable

mhx writes “A single character sent by text message could allegedly compromise every iPhone released to date. The technique involves sending only one unusual text character or else a series of ‘invisible’ messages that confuse the phone and open the door to attack. Apple has not released any updates yet, so little can be done, […]

David Pogue Wants to Take Back the Beep

David Pogue has distilled into useful form a long-standing complaint I have (and one reason I have long had a voice mail greeting that asked people not to leave me voicemail): cell phone companies set up the greeting, caller instructions, and playback system prompts in large part to maximize their revenue per user; by his […]

Games That Design Themselves

destinyland writes “MIT’s Media Lab is building ‘a game that designs its own AI agents by observing the behavior of humans.’ Their ultimate goal? ‘Collective AI-driven agents that can interact and converse with humans without requiring programming or specialists to hand-craft behavior and dialogue.’ With a similar project underway by a University of California professor, […]

Windows 7 vs. Windows XP On a Netbook

Justin writes “Many in the industry are counting on Windows 7 to bring the netbook market to the next level. Having netbook manufacturers ship netbooks with 7+ year old Windows XP pre-installed surely deterred some from joining the ranks of households with the small, light and portable netbooks. It seems Microsoft has addressed most of […]

Panel Advises Longer Life For Space Station

suraj.sun writes “A presidential panel reviewing the U.S. space program has found that the United States needs to boost NASA’s budget by $1.5 billion to fly the last seven shuttle missions and should extend International Space Station operations through 2020. The panel also proposed adding an extra, eighth shuttle flight to help keep the station […]

Rude Drivers Reduce Traffic Jams

BuzzSkyline writes “Traffic jams are minimized if a significant fraction of drivers break the rules by doing things like passing on the wrong side or changing lanes too close to an intersection. The insight comes from a cellular automata study published this month in the journal Physical Review E. In effect, people who disregard the […]

The Downsides to Digital Distribution

The gaming industry’s ongoing shift from physical media to direct downloads has made buying new titles much more convenient, and in some cases cheaper. However, as this article in The Escapist notes, there are downsides as well, such as an increased dependence on console makers and the inability to sell your used games. Quoting: “Microsoft […]

Alan Cox Quits As Linux TTY Maintainer — “I’ve Had Enough”

The Slashdolt writes “After a stern criticism from Linus, the long-time kernel hacker Alan Cox has decided to walk away as the maintainer of the TTY subsystem of the Linux Kernel, stating ‘…I’ve had enough. If you think that problem is easy to fix you fix it. Have fun. I’ve zapped the tty merge queue […]